The results of the European Parliament elections will have been closely watched in the Western Balkans – and with good reason. Support for enlargement, undermined in recent years by the attention given to the financial crisis, is likely to diminish still further as the anti-immigrant and Eurosceptic feeling that emerged from the period of austerity has finally been reflected in the ballot box. However, the region may yet find a champion, or two, from within the new line up at the heart of European Union. James Ker-Lindsay discusses
Katya Ivanova is a doctoral candidate in the LSE European Institute. She is interested in internatio...
The present boat‐migration crisis in the Mediterranean Sea constitutes the greatest test to Western ...
The 5th European Biennial of Landscape Architecture was held in Barcelona on the 25th, 26th and 27th...
While the European Union is being rocked by the crisis of the euro, it seems to be losing its status...
‘Serbia certainly holds a position that few other states in Europe can match: it is a country that i...
European neglect of political crises in the Western Balkans has long been lamented: many are convinc...
A sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone has morphed into a crisis of the euro itself, revealing thre...
On 2 February 2012 the LSE’s European Foreign Policy Unit hosted the fourth of ten roundtables on ‘E...
South East Europe could take inspiration from its Central European neighbours and focus on regional ...
The idea of a legally binding European Security Treaty (EST), voiced by Dmitry MedvedevEuropa in Jun...
According to recent news, we should be quite optimistic about the state of European Union (EU) acces...
To a number of Western observers, last month’s arrest of Ratko Mladic brings to an end the long draw...
The 28 European Union member states have 24 different official languages. While the EU seeks homogen...
The Western Balkan countries have undergone dramatic economic transformations since the beginning of...
In a recent letter to Catherine Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, nineteen former senior politi...
Katya Ivanova is a doctoral candidate in the LSE European Institute. She is interested in internatio...
The present boat‐migration crisis in the Mediterranean Sea constitutes the greatest test to Western ...
The 5th European Biennial of Landscape Architecture was held in Barcelona on the 25th, 26th and 27th...
While the European Union is being rocked by the crisis of the euro, it seems to be losing its status...
‘Serbia certainly holds a position that few other states in Europe can match: it is a country that i...
European neglect of political crises in the Western Balkans has long been lamented: many are convinc...
A sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone has morphed into a crisis of the euro itself, revealing thre...
On 2 February 2012 the LSE’s European Foreign Policy Unit hosted the fourth of ten roundtables on ‘E...
South East Europe could take inspiration from its Central European neighbours and focus on regional ...
The idea of a legally binding European Security Treaty (EST), voiced by Dmitry MedvedevEuropa in Jun...
According to recent news, we should be quite optimistic about the state of European Union (EU) acces...
To a number of Western observers, last month’s arrest of Ratko Mladic brings to an end the long draw...
The 28 European Union member states have 24 different official languages. While the EU seeks homogen...
The Western Balkan countries have undergone dramatic economic transformations since the beginning of...
In a recent letter to Catherine Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, nineteen former senior politi...
Katya Ivanova is a doctoral candidate in the LSE European Institute. She is interested in internatio...
The present boat‐migration crisis in the Mediterranean Sea constitutes the greatest test to Western ...
The 5th European Biennial of Landscape Architecture was held in Barcelona on the 25th, 26th and 27th...