Call for Abstracts

for a workshop on

 

EU External Environmental Governance Beyond its Neighbourhood

 

19 & 20 April 2013

Berlin

 

This workshop adopts a wide angle on a broad variety of different external 
governance efforts in which the EU engages, including international 
negotiations, policy promotion and the use of market power. It strives to 
analyse the effectiveness of different EU external environmental governance 
efforts, to identify different patterns EU external environmental governance 
and to explore the conditions in non-EU countries and internationally that 
enable or impede effective EU external governance.

 

The slow progress of international climate negotiations and the ‘failed’ 
leadership of the European Union at the Copenhagen conference of the parties to 
the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change attracted significant scholarly 
attention. Finding consensus on a suitable post-Kyoto Protocol agreement poses 
major challenges. The difficulties with the ‘traditional’ multilateral way of 
governing global environmental problems through treaties gave rise to a search 
for solutions that complement and support these efforts. The EU has set 
ambitious domestic climate targets and strives for similar commitments of other 
major polluters. In other environmental policy areas such as chemicals policy, 
the EU also leads by adopting and promoting ambitious regulation. Apart from 
multilateral negotiations, the EU’s toolbox comprises bilateral agreements, 
cooperation efforts with non-EU jurisdictions at different levels of 
governance, coercion and incentives, and external effects of EU pioneering 
policy through learning, competition and emulation.

 

Studies show that the further remote from the EU’s neighbourhood a jurisdiction 
is located, the more important become domestic conditions in non-EU countries 
because the EU’s leverage diminishes. The workshop stresses this aspect and 
strives to investigate the interplay between non-EU domestic factors and the 
EU’s external governance activities. EU scholars recently have paid increasing 
attention to the external effects of EU policies and institutions on countries 
beyond the EU’s neighbourhood. They propose conceptualisations of EU external 
governance and Europeanisation beyond Europe. This workshop aims at 
contributing to this emerging field by focusing on the area of environmental 
policy.

 

We invite paper proposals that cover, in particular, the following aspects and 
questions. Ideally, papers will cover a number of these elements. Both 
individual case studies and comparative studies are invited.

 

- Different EU activities and mechanisms: What kind of external governance 
tools and activities (international negotiations, policy promotion, capacity 
building, conditionality etc.) does the EU engage in with what result? 
Conditionality figures highly in the EU’s neighbourhood and accession policy. 
However, it becomes less salient in EU external governance beyond its 
neighbourhood. What mechanisms prevail in external environmental governance?

 

- Different domestic factors in third countries: The success of EU external 
governance efforts depends on certain scope conditions. Which domestic factors 
foster the effectiveness of or constitute a barrier to EU external 
environmental governance?

 

- Different levels of governance: Not only nation states, also subnational 
entities and international organisations can be subject to external effects of 
EU environmental policy. How can we characterise the EU’s external 
environmental governance in a multilevel context?

 

- Different regions and countries: How can we characterise EU external 
environmental governance in different countries and regions of the world? Are 
there differences with regard to the EU’s approach and its effectiveness?

 

- Different institutional embeddedness: To what extent is a non-EU jurisdiction 
embedded in regional networks that are not directed towards Europe (Asia, Latin 
America, Africa etc.)

 

- Different policy subfields: How can we characterise EU external governance in 
different areas of environmental policy? Are there differences between policy 
types (for example product- vs. process-related) and policy areas (for example 
climate change vs. biodiversity)?

 

Interested authors are invited to send an abstract (max. 500 words) to Katja 
Biedenkopf (k.biedenk...@uva.nl) and Diarmuid Torney (diarmuidtor...@gmail.com) 
by 31 December 2012. Invited paper givers will be asked to submit their final 
paper by 5 April 2012.

 

The workshop is funded by the "Kolleg Forschergruppe (KFG) The Transformative 
Power of Europe" of the Freie Universität Berlin. Accommodation and travel 
expenses will be covered for invited paper givers.

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