La gouvernance de la sécurité au sein de l’UE : un nouveau défi pour le Canada
Dublin Core
Title
La gouvernance de la sécurité au sein de l’UE : un nouveau défi pour le Canada
Description
Since 1976, Canada and the EU developed and enlarged their relations including not only investment and trade, but also international security, environment, justice, culture, etc. During the last decade, the European Union progressively became an actor in the field of security and defence with the adoption of the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP). ESDP is entering in the logic outside of the traditional framework analysis that conceives security as a natural input, linked to territorial defence and assumed only by the State via military means. If ESDP entered in an intergovernmental logic, it is no longer the exclusive field of the Member States, but rather the result of interactions between a broad variety of public and private actors. In this new EU security governance, Canada is bound to face a major challenge, but it’s not sure that it is conscious of all the possibilities for its foreign and security policy!
Full text available: https://doi.org/10.22215/rera.v3i2.156
Full text available: https://doi.org/10.22215/rera.v3i2.156
Creator
Lavallée, Chantal
Source
Canadian Journal of European and Russian Studies; 2007: RERA V3:2 New Foreign Policy Challenges and Canada-EU Relations (backfile abstracts)
2562-8429
10.22215/cjers.v3i2
Publisher
Centre for European Studies, Carleton University
Date
2007-08-01
Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Peer-reviewed Article
Identifier
Citation
Lavallée, Chantal, La gouvernance de la sécurité au sein de l’UE : un nouveau défi pour le Canada, Centre for European Studies, Carleton University, 2007, accessed November 22, 2024, https://igi.indrastra.com/items/show/2721