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This book examines the effects of normative contestation on EU foreign policy through three significant empirical cases: arms control, migration, and gender equality. The subject is particularly relevant in the current context of increasing contestation of the liberal international order. Drawing on norm research and European studies literature, the book applies the concept of norm contestation to the broader study of EU foreign and security policy.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The Contestation of Norms and the European Union.- Chapter 3: The European Union and Arms Control: Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems (2014-2021).- Chapter 4: - The European Union and Migration: The UN Global Compact for Migration (2016-2018).- Chapter 5: The European Union and Gender Equality: The Case of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (2017-2021).- Chapter 6: Conclusions.
About the author
Diego Badell is Assistant Professor in International Relations and European Studies at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Spain. Prior to this role, he was Research Fellow at the Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI). His research focuses on EU foreign policy and international norms, particularly multilateral institutions. He has published in Public Management Review, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, International Relations, Journal of Common Market Studies, European Security, and Global Affairs.
Summary
This book examines the effects of normative contestation on EU foreign policy through three significant empirical cases: arms control, migration, and gender equality. The subject is particularly relevant in the current context of increasing contestation of the liberal international order. Drawing on norm research and European studies literature, the book applies the concept of norm contestation to the broader study of EU foreign and security policy.