
The European External Action Service
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Reviews / Votes
"All chapters are written by well known scholars who have followed the Service since its inception. . Given the style and level of detail, the book will certainly be of interest to scholars, practitioners and students who want to know more about the creation of the EEAS and possible developments, but above all about what the EEAS is today." (Lorenzo Vai, The International Spectator, Vol. 52 (4), 2017)
"The book covers the whole gamut of the EEAS's activities, starting from its institutional position within the EU framework and touching upon the legal implications of its evolution, its role in multilateral forums, its bilateral activities and its recruitment and training practices. . This book is therefore an essential and illuminating reading for any scholar willing to explore the future developments of the EEAS." (Marco Rossi, JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol. 54 (6), 2016)
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Content
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Notes on Contributors
Introduction: The EEAS as a Catalyst of Diplomatic Innovation; Jozef Bátora and David Spence
1. Theorizing the EU''s Diplomatic Service: Rational Player or Social Body?; Rebecca Adler-Nissen
PART I: THE NEW SETTING OF EU DIPLOMACY: problems and Prospects for the European External Action Service
2. The EEAS and its epistemic communities: the challenge of hybridism; David Spence
3. A hybrid service: organising efficient EU foreign policy; Cesare Onestini
4. The High Representative of the Union: the quest for leadership in EU foreign policy; Niklas Helwig
5. The Advance of a European Executive Order in Foreign Policy? Recruitment Practices in the European External Action Service (EEAS); Zuzana Murdoch and Jarle Trondal
6. The EEAS, EU External Assistance and Development Aid: Institutional Dissonance or Inter-service Harmony?; Isabelle Tannous
7. Democratic accountability and EU diplomacy: the EEAS and the role of the European Parliament; Kolja Raube
PART II: THE EEAS AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
8. Unus inter plures? The EEAS, the Vienna Convention and international diplomatic practice; Jan Wouters and Sanderijn Duquet
9. EU Law and the EEAS: Of Complex Competences and Constitutional Consequences; Geert De Baere and Ramses A. Wessel
PART III: EFFECTIVE MULTILATERALISM: EU DELEGATIONS TO INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
10. The EU Delegation in New York: A Debut in High Political Drama; Katie Laatikainen
11. From the Convention to Lisbon: external competence and the uneasy transition for Geneva Delegations; David Spence
12. Effective multilateralism after Lisbon: the added value of the EEAS and the EU delegation in Vienna; Lars Erik Lundin
PART IV: BILATERALISM and EUROPEAN DIPLOMATIC CAPACITY
13. National adaptation and survival in a changing European diplomacy; Rosa Balfour and Kristi Raik
14. Europe in America: an upgraded EU delegation in a reinforced system of European diplomatic coordination; Heidi Maurer
15. Representing the EU in China: European Bilateral Diplomacy in a Competitive Diplomatic Environment; Frauke Austermann
16. Structural Diplomacy and foreign policy: the Case of the EU Delegation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; Bruno Hanses and David Spence
PART V: ORGANIZING FOR A COMPREHENSIVE DIPLOMATIC APPROACH
17. The EEAS and Crisis Management: the Organisational Challenges of a Comprehensive Approach; Allison Weston and Frederic Mérand
18. The Public Diplomacy Role of the EEAS: crafting a Resilient Image for Europe; Mai''a K. Davis Cross
19. Towards a EU Consular policy?; Ana Mar Fernandez-Pasarin
PART VI: HUMAN RESOURCES AND DIPLOMATIC TRAINING
20. Attitudes, identities and esprit de corps in the EEAS; Ana Juncos and Karolina Pomorska
21. Women in the EEAS: another Post-Westphalia Change?; Tereza Novotná
22. Preparing the Future: Diplomatic Training in the EU; Simon Duke
Index
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