Abstract

ABSTRACT For a long time, Taiwan was confined to being an object of the EU’s China policy, but the EU increasingly treats Taiwan as a partner in its own right. EU-Taiwan relations are in their most dynamic stage since the EU opened its representative office in Taipei in 2003. But the ‘One China policy’ still constrains EU-Taiwan relations, as the EU only recognizes the People’s Republic of China as a sovereign state and not Taiwan. The article analyzes EU-Taiwan relations through the lens of Normative Power Europe. Taiwan has gained more attention and support in the EU, because Taiwan is Asia’s most liberal democracy. Furthermore, Taiwan also fits well into the EU’s geo-economic strategy of de-risking. China’s increasingly aggressive policy towards Taiwan and strong support from the United States for Taiwan strengthen the EU’s support for Taiwan, too.

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