Europe
Europe is described here in a geographical sense. It is not limited to the European Union, and includes, for example, the United Kingdom and the Balkans. It remains central to international relations.
Related Subjects

Multilateralisms: Survival or Revival?

The organized multilateralism born out of the Second World War and the Cold War, and revived in the 1990s with the dream of a world of peaceful “global governance,” has fizzled out. The erosion of the large universal frameworks (United Nations, World Trade Organization, arms control and disarmament, international criminal justice, and so on) did not give way to a void but to an excess: a multitude of agreements and schemes that bore witness to the accelerated rebuilding of international relationships. Will institutional anarchy and the open competition of interests visible in uninhibited struggles for power be able to organize themselves around common fundamental interests in the future?
Unemployment in East Asia and Europe: Report of the Council for Asia-Europe Cooperation (CAEC)
France and the Convention: Between National Interests and a European Vision
This analysis presents the French positions at the European Convention, and the debate it is raising in France. It is part of the EPIN network's activities, which involve the CEPS and other institutes such as Ifri.
On Local Citizenship
The debate on the local citizenship of migrant populations and those born from migrant populations has been vibrant for the past thirty years. Its contents have nevertheless undergone several changes.
Paris, Berlin, London: Towards the Emergence of a European Directorate?
France, NATO and European Security: Status Quo Unsustainable, New Balance Unattainable?
France, Europe and the Mediterranean: A Region of Opportunities
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