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Detailed Information
Title
Author
George Voskopoulos
Institution
University of Macedonia
Abstract

European security has historically been linked to the expectations-capabilities gap of the European Union (EU) as well as the EU’s role as a normative power reflected by the conscious choices made by European leaderships. Treaties have been the defining parameters of the operational ability, cognitive potential and institutional capacity of Europe to play a normative role in world politics. The Arab Spring phenomenon has illustrated the actual potential of the EU to act in unity. It has also shown that when inherent European idealism clashes with the realities of international politics, securitized idealism becomes the only viable choice. The concept bears a value-fact (security) oxymoron and is based on the need to balance security needs with the desire to spill over democracy in the Arab world.

Date of Publication
Recommended citation
Voskopoulos, George, The Arab Spring Phenomenon and European Security: Change and Continuity Under The Spectrum of Securitized Idealism (November 30, 2015). The IUP Journal of International Relations, Vol. IX, No. 3, July 2015, pp. 23-34.
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