Abstract

This article analyses the extent to which and the way in which the European Union (EU) has acted as a security provider in its eastern vicinity since the European Neighbourhood Policy was launched. The EU's capacity to emerge as a security provider and the approaches developed in this purpose are gauged against three major EU objectives in the eastern neighbourhood: conflict resolution, control of migration flows and good governance. The article sustains that EU efforts to reach objectives which it considers important for regional security are undermined by a lack of coherence in policy implementation across the eastern neighbourhood.

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