The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border.
The European Union’s eastern border created a new divide in Europe, related to many problems, contradictions and consequences. The removal of internal borders within the EU and the opening of a common market were accompanied by a continuous strengthening and an increasing importance of external bord...
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Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | English |
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Wydawnictwo Instytut Slaski
2009
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2434/147360 |
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author | A. Vitale |
author2 | K. Heffner A. Vitale |
author_facet | A. Vitale |
author_sort | A. Vitale |
collection | The University of Milan: Archivio Istituzionale della Ricerca (AIR) |
description | The European Union’s eastern border created a new divide in Europe, related to many problems, contradictions and consequences. The removal of internal borders within the EU and the opening of a common market were accompanied by a continuous strengthening and an increasing importance of external borders; the enlargement produced automatically a renewed cleavage between the two “Europes”. The enlargement rooted the European Union’s eastern border deep into the territory of the former Soviet Union, in the Baltic region, and reached States that are still in the process of institution-building. This paper aims to look at some contradictions and difficulties of this new EU’s border in managing security, external relations between inside and outside of the Union. As the new external border of the EU is becoming increasingly more scrutinized, it contributes to the disruption of long-standing economic and social relationships in the border regions, and ultimately a new dividing line between the “ins” and “outs” of the integration process. It adds to the complexity of the EU, changes its profile, and reaches new neighbours. It divides Europe in two parts, with the “other” Europe being either anxious to get in, or feeling excluded. The EU’s eastern border is also a contributor to the identity definition of those on both sides of the border, but the new border is also perceived as the source of some of the main security threats to the EU and non-traditional concerns emanating from Eastern and Southern Europe caused growing anxiety in the EU. The perceived security deficit has been increased the impermeability of the EU’s external border. As a result, this external border has been further strengthened and even militarized since 2004, but the restrictive border policy may at the same time undermine the headline goal of European foreign policy: the continent-wide stability. The management of these borders will have a significant impact on the stability of the rest of Europe, which finds itself outside the EU, as well as on the ... |
format | Conference Object |
genre | karelia* karelia* |
genre_facet | karelia* karelia* |
id | ftunivmilanoair:oai:air.unimi.it:2434/147360 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftunivmilanoair |
op_relation | info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-83-7126-252-4 ispartofseries:Region and Regionalism 9 ispartofbook:Historical regions divided by the borders. 2, Cultural heritage and multicultural cities firstpage:91 lastpage:116 alleditors:K. Heffner http://hdl.handle.net/2434/147360 |
publishDate | 2009 |
publisher | Wydawnictwo Instytut Slaski |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftunivmilanoair:oai:air.unimi.it:2434/147360 2025-01-16T22:50:36+00:00 The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. A. Vitale K. Heffner A. Vitale 2009 http://hdl.handle.net/2434/147360 eng eng Wydawnictwo Instytut Slaski place:Lodz-Opole info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-83-7126-252-4 ispartofseries:Region and Regionalism 9 ispartofbook:Historical regions divided by the borders. 2, Cultural heritage and multicultural cities firstpage:91 lastpage:116 alleditors:K. Heffner http://hdl.handle.net/2434/147360 EU borders Karelia Finland Russia barriers Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica Settore M-GGR/02 - Geografia Economico-Politica info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2009 ftunivmilanoair 2024-01-02T23:25:21Z The European Union’s eastern border created a new divide in Europe, related to many problems, contradictions and consequences. The removal of internal borders within the EU and the opening of a common market were accompanied by a continuous strengthening and an increasing importance of external borders; the enlargement produced automatically a renewed cleavage between the two “Europes”. The enlargement rooted the European Union’s eastern border deep into the territory of the former Soviet Union, in the Baltic region, and reached States that are still in the process of institution-building. This paper aims to look at some contradictions and difficulties of this new EU’s border in managing security, external relations between inside and outside of the Union. As the new external border of the EU is becoming increasingly more scrutinized, it contributes to the disruption of long-standing economic and social relationships in the border regions, and ultimately a new dividing line between the “ins” and “outs” of the integration process. It adds to the complexity of the EU, changes its profile, and reaches new neighbours. It divides Europe in two parts, with the “other” Europe being either anxious to get in, or feeling excluded. The EU’s eastern border is also a contributor to the identity definition of those on both sides of the border, but the new border is also perceived as the source of some of the main security threats to the EU and non-traditional concerns emanating from Eastern and Southern Europe caused growing anxiety in the EU. The perceived security deficit has been increased the impermeability of the EU’s external border. As a result, this external border has been further strengthened and even militarized since 2004, but the restrictive border policy may at the same time undermine the headline goal of European foreign policy: the continent-wide stability. The management of these borders will have a significant impact on the stability of the rest of Europe, which finds itself outside the EU, as well as on the ... Conference Object karelia* karelia* The University of Milan: Archivio Istituzionale della Ricerca (AIR) |
spellingShingle | EU borders Karelia Finland Russia barriers Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica Settore M-GGR/02 - Geografia Economico-Politica A. Vitale The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. |
title | The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. |
title_full | The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. |
title_fullStr | The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. |
title_full_unstemmed | The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. |
title_short | The Eastern borders of the EU : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the Finno-Russian border in Karelia and the Lithuanian-Byelorussian border. |
title_sort | eastern borders of the eu : some contradictions and consequences : remarks about comparison between two different case-studies : the finno-russian border in karelia and the lithuanian-byelorussian border. |
topic | EU borders Karelia Finland Russia barriers Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica Settore M-GGR/02 - Geografia Economico-Politica |
topic_facet | EU borders Karelia Finland Russia barriers Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica Settore M-GGR/02 - Geografia Economico-Politica |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/2434/147360 |