This article explores how the use of alliances and treaties changed along with the developments in the European international order in the modern era. Fundamentally, European international relations remained based on an "anarchic" system of competing sovereign states. Yet the evolution of concepts of international law from the Renaissance onwards and the impact of cultural, political, and social developments has encouraged a use of treaties and alliances that has moved European politics fitfully towards a "constitutional" solution, while never fully embracing such a model
In a recent letter to Catherine Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, nineteen former senior politi...
Neutrality has long been seen as impartiality in war (Grotius, 1925), and is codified as such in Th...
As the European debt crisis enters its sixth year, European elites continue to propose new policy “s...
The concept of public diplomacy has traditionally been understood in state‐centric terms and has bee...
How does the EU deal with incoherence and coherence? In this paper we try to answer this research qu...
France is one of the EU member states with a most highly-developed national strategic culture. Victo...
A few weeks ago, the European Commission opened an antitrust investigation into the Most Favored Nat...
The literature on European integration has its own business cycles. In the 2000s, the common wisdom ...
On the 8th of September, AG Mengozzi issued his Opinion in the first case brought to the CJEU on the...
Under the title “Connected Continent” the EU’s Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes introduced a...
The Eurozone crisis has brought the EU’s division into two types of membership into relief, with the...
Loreto Corredoira, Professor of Communication Law at Complutense University of Madrid, shares some i...
Founded on an analysis of biographies and carriers of top‐rank officials and members of the European...
Globalization is often portrayed as a tidal wave that originated in the US and its policy of laissez...
Last week, the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) declared that the Safe Harbour agreement...
In a recent letter to Catherine Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, nineteen former senior politi...
Neutrality has long been seen as impartiality in war (Grotius, 1925), and is codified as such in Th...
As the European debt crisis enters its sixth year, European elites continue to propose new policy “s...
The concept of public diplomacy has traditionally been understood in state‐centric terms and has bee...
How does the EU deal with incoherence and coherence? In this paper we try to answer this research qu...
France is one of the EU member states with a most highly-developed national strategic culture. Victo...
A few weeks ago, the European Commission opened an antitrust investigation into the Most Favored Nat...
The literature on European integration has its own business cycles. In the 2000s, the common wisdom ...
On the 8th of September, AG Mengozzi issued his Opinion in the first case brought to the CJEU on the...
Under the title “Connected Continent” the EU’s Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes introduced a...
The Eurozone crisis has brought the EU’s division into two types of membership into relief, with the...
Loreto Corredoira, Professor of Communication Law at Complutense University of Madrid, shares some i...
Founded on an analysis of biographies and carriers of top‐rank officials and members of the European...
Globalization is often portrayed as a tidal wave that originated in the US and its policy of laissez...
Last week, the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) declared that the Safe Harbour agreement...
In a recent letter to Catherine Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, nineteen former senior politi...
Neutrality has long been seen as impartiality in war (Grotius, 1925), and is codified as such in Th...
As the European debt crisis enters its sixth year, European elites continue to propose new policy “s...