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4776 Articles

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INNOVATIVE AND SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT APPROACHES IN UKRAINIAN AGRIBUSINESS: STRATEGIES FOR ECONOMIC RESILIENCE AND EU INTEGRATION

This article examines the strategic role of innovative management models in advancing sustainable development within the Ukrainian agribusiness sector. Against the backdrop of war-related disruptions, infrastructural challenges, and the broader goal of European Union integration, Ukraine's agribusiness industry faces both significant risks and transformative opportunities. The study emphasizes the sector’s central role in economic resilience, food security, employment, and export potential, making it a key driver of national recovery and sustainable growth. The paper explores how innovative management approaches, characterized by technological integration, adaptability, and collaboration, which differ fundamentally from traditional practices. By leveraging digital tools, precision agriculture, real-time data analytics, and forward-looking resource management, these models foster enhanced efficiency and long-term sustainability. The integration of environmental, economic, and social dimensions is discussed through the lens of the triple bottom line and EU policy frameworks, including the European Green Deal and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Drawing from international experiences, the article highlights the relevance of climate-smart agriculture, intellectual capital development, and regional clustering for Ukraine. These elements are shown to support innovation ecosystems capable of withstanding external shocks while aligning with global sustainability trends. However, systemic challenges, such as inadequate infrastructure, limited access to financing, and institutional inertia are recognized as significant barriers to adoption. Ultimately, the article argues that for Ukraine to fully realize the potential of its agribusiness sector, a holistic and adaptive model of management must be implemented as one that integrates sustainability across all levels of enterprise operations and policy design. This transformation will require coordinated efforts across government, business, and academic sectors, as well as consistent investment and reform.

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  • Journal IconСталий розвиток економіки
  • Publication Date IconJul 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Андрій Ковальський
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Blue Nature-Based Solutions in marine and coastal EU policies: Challenges, recommendations and policy opportunities throughout the policy cycle

Blue Nature-Based Solutions in marine and coastal EU policies: Challenges, recommendations and policy opportunities throughout the policy cycle

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  • Journal IconMarine Policy
  • Publication Date IconJul 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Frehen Lise + 2
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Bureaucratic politics in customized implementation of the EU Single-Use Plastics Directive in France and Germany

Abstract When implementing EU policies, national policy bureaucracies often face a goal conflict when national policy preferences are not aligned with the EU policy and they are granted little discretion in implementation: While customized implementation allows them to adjust EU policies to the national context, it also risks noncompliance with EU law and blame for unpopular EU policies. This bureaucratic politics perspective has received little attention in institutionalist and interest-based explanations of customized implementation. With a bureaucratic politics approach, this article argues that national governments pursue strategies of blame avoidance and reputation seeking when confronted with high goal conflict between timely and correct implementation and substantive (national) policy goals. This argument is illustrated in a comparative case study on the implementation of the EU Single-Use Plastics Directive in France and Germany. This article identifies bureaucratic strategies of blame avoidance and reputation seeking as an underlying mechanism of customized implementation.

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  • Journal IconJournal of Public Policy
  • Publication Date IconJun 30, 2025
  • Author Icon Anna Simstich
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ESG implementation process – stakeholders influence on European “Green Deal” politics

RESEARCH OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to demonstrate the interdependencies between the broader external environment and the immediate environment, by identifying the main stakeholders in influencing actions related to the European Union Green Deal (GD) and the implementation of ESG standards. RESEARCH PROBLEMS AND METHODS: In order to achieve the assumed goal, the stages of implementation of both the GD and the processes related to the implementation of ESG in the sphere of reporting entities will be analyzed. The cause-and-effect relationship between elements of the closer environment (stakeholders) and elements of the more distant environment will be assessed. THE PROCESS OF ARGUMENTATION: The article begins with a review of the literature in the area of ​​sustainable development and the stakeholder concept. Then the EU sustainable development policy and examples of stakeholder activities and their impact on EU policies were analyzed. Finally the PEST method was used to analyze the cause-and-effect relationship of stakeholders on sustainable EU policy. RESEARCH RESULTS: The implementation of the objective will allow for the identification of the impact of stakeholders and their behavior on the EU policy. The article shows that based on the assumptions of the stakeholder concept, it is possible to determine the degree of influence of the main stakeholders of the GD project on factors of the further environment. CONCLUSIONS, INNOVATIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS: The analysis of the success of implementing a project related to the implementation of the GD requires a combination of techniques related to the organization’s environment. Sustainable policy can only be effectively implemented through dialogue with all major stakeholders whose behavior significantly affects the further environment.

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  • Journal IconHoryzonty Polityki
  • Publication Date IconJun 29, 2025
  • Author Icon Karol Śledzik + 2
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Advancing BIM implementation in Romania: Legal context and industry readiness for public construction projects

Building Information Modelling (BIM) is reshaping the global construction industry by enhancing collaboration, transparency, and sustainability throughout the project lifecycle. In Romania, however, BIM implementation in publicly funded construction projects faces significant legal, institutional, and cultural challenges. This paper examines the current regulatory landscape, focusing on national strategies, public procurement laws, and relevant technical documentation frameworks. Drawing on recent national surveys and case studies, it explores industry perceptions, technical barriers, and the level of BIM maturity. The findings reveal a growing awareness and gradual adoption of BIM, yet highlight persistent obstacles such as limited professional training, unclear legal responsibilities, and high implementation costs. Based on this analysis, the paper provides strategic recommendations for improving the regulatory framework, developing national standards, fostering interdisciplinary education, and accelerating digital transformation across the Romanian construction sector in alignment with EU policies and international best practices.

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  • Journal IconInternational Journal for Housing Science and Its Applications
  • Publication Date IconJun 28, 2025
  • Author Icon Andrei Crisan + 5
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The evolution of Cohesion Policy in 40 years of economic policy agenda

ABSTRACT This paper aims to contribute to the current debate about the future of cohesion policy by putting the debate within the broader evolution of the EU policy agenda over the past four decades in the light of the overarching aims of territorial cohesion and economic convergence. We develop a new periodization of the evolution of the EU policy agenda based on the dynamic interplay of three factors: (i) the overarching political aim of the economic policy agenda; (ii) the evolution of the international and domestic economic and political context and (iii) the underlying economic theories that informed the policy-making process. We identify three periods as a result: the first, from 1987 to 1999 that we label ‘the age of hope’; the second, from 2000 to 2010 that we label ‘the age of innocence’ and the last, starting in 2011 that we label ‘the age of disillusion’. We then analyse the three periods in relation to economic convergence and cohesion policy, and discuss the implications for the future of cohesion policy and the objective of economic convergence within the current agenda of economic policy.

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  • Journal IconEuropean Planning Studies
  • Publication Date IconJun 25, 2025
  • Author Icon Andrea Filippetti + 1
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Integration of bioeconomy within regional policy frameworks: a case study of the Wielkopolska Voivodeship

BackgroundRecently, many countries and regions have started developing targeted bioeconomy strategies and plans. The concept of the bioeconomy has evolved since the implementation of the first European Union bioeconomy strategy in 2012. Current trends include, among others, the circular economy, biotechnology, and sustainable development.Material and methodsThis article examines the role of the bioeconomy in the strategic documents of the Wielkopolska Voivodeship, using a case study approach along with analytical and critical methods. Additionally, it explores local government initiatives supporting bioeconomy development, identified through interviews.ResultsIn Wielkopolska, there is currently no formal plan to develop a dedicated bioeconomy strategy. However, numerous documents and plans related to the bioeconomy have been developed since 2020, aligning regional policies with the objectives of European Union policy. The local government of Wielkopolska is actively engaged in food waste reduction through education, investment, and support for NGOs and entrepreneurs. There is strong institutional support for bioeconomy-related innovation, including dedicated strategies, funding, competitions, and stakeholder cooperation platforms.ConclusionsA regional bioeconomy strategy is essential for leveraging local resources, addressing region-specific challenges, and aligning with EU policy frameworks. While Wielkopolska currently lacks a formal strategy, elements of the bioeconomy are included in existing plans. Developing regionally tailored strategies, fostering public awareness, enhancing education, and encouraging cross-sector colla­boration is key to building a sustainable, innovation-driven bioeconomy.

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  • Journal IconBioTechnologia
  • Publication Date IconJun 23, 2025
  • Author Icon Ewa Woźniak-Gientka
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Civil society participation in EU preparation for UN climate negotiations—Questions of openness and transparency

Abstract Despite the European Union's strong commitment to transparent and participatory governance, the preparation of its position for international climate negotiations is not particularly transparent or open to civil society participation. The situation could be said to reflect a broader paradigm of secrecy in EU policy‐ and law‐making. This paper discusses factors that uphold the secrecy in the EU preparation for climate negotiations and how that secrecy could dispelled to some extent. In addition, the analysis provides recommendations for how better civil society participation could be achieved without putting the confidentiality of the international climate negotiations or the EU's strategic ends at risk.

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  • Journal IconReview of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law
  • Publication Date IconJun 22, 2025
  • Author Icon Tuula Honkonen
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Воєводський договір в імплементації регіональної політики ЄС у Польщі (2001-2013 рр.)

The purpose of the article is to study the regional contract as a tool for implementing the EU's common regional policy at the level of regions of the Republic of Poland and to identify which challenges it has been an effective response to and which problems have not been solved through the use of this mechanism. The research methodology consisted of studying the legal framework, mechanisms of development, conclusion and published results of the implementation of regional contract. The analysis revealed which challenges to the implementation of regional policy Poland was able to respond to through the implementation of regional contracts and which it failed to respond to properly. The scientific novelty is to determine the necessary legal support (including local government reform) and to study the advantages of using the mechanisms of the regional contract for the implementation of regional policy in the Republic of Poland and the shortcomings of the system of their implementation. Conclusions. The mechanism of regional contracts ensured the adaptation of Polish regions to the procedures for planning and implementing projects financed by EU funds. Participation in the planning and implementation of projects has contributed to the professional development of regional administration staff and improved their ability to manage the development of their territories. The mechanism of using regional contracts has proved the effectiveness of the local government reform in Poland. The process of concluding agreements has enabled voivodeships to directly allocate funds to projects important for specific regions, including infrastructure development, environmental protection and social programmes. Negotiations between the central government and regional authorities have fostered dialogue and taken into account the specifics of each voivodeship. Conflicts of interest, differences in views and approaches to solving specific issues were clarified and agreed upon at the negotiation stage. And in the process of implementing and executing the agreement, the parties already had common goals and mechanisms for maximizing the use of the allocated funds to achieve the agreed objectives. However, the limitations associated with short-term planning, insufficient coordination and uneven distribution of resources pointed to the need for further improvement of this instrument.

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  • Journal IconScientific Papers of the Vinnytsia Mykhailo Kotsyiubynskyi State Pedagogical University Series History
  • Publication Date IconJun 22, 2025
  • Author Icon Олександр Неприцький + 2
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Including Circular Economy Waste Measures in the Climate Mitigation Mix in EU Policy Making

Including Circular Economy Waste Measures in the Climate Mitigation Mix in EU Policy Making

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  • Journal IconCircular Economy and Sustainability
  • Publication Date IconJun 20, 2025
  • Author Icon Dana Iliescu
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On the Applicability of the Advocacy Coalition Framework for Analyzing EU Policy Processes

ABSTRACTInitially developed for the US context, the Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) is increasingly used to analyze policy processes in the EU. But policymaking in EU differs from the US context, why the applicability of ACF in the EU context should be scrutinized. This paper discusses limitations of ACF for analyzing supranational EU policy processes. Policymaking in EU is mainly about collaboration and competition of organizations. Thus, the central concept of ACF—individual beliefs—is difficult to apply. Organizations have cultures, not beliefs. The formal path to policy change in EU is negotiations to reach consensus. These take place in different modes, affecting policy learning. If systems boundaries are adapted to EU governance, organizations are given more attention, and ACF theories are developed to better explain negotiations and policy learning, ACF can complement macro‐level studies of European integration with meso‐level perspectives to better explain policy change in EU.

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  • Journal IconEuropean Policy Analysis
  • Publication Date IconJun 17, 2025
  • Author Icon Fredrik Von Malmborg
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The AfD's Election Campaigns on Euroscepticism: A Comparative Analysis of The 2019 And 2024 EP Elections

In the European Parliamentary Elections held in 2019, the Alternative for Germany Party (AfD), which embraces European skepticism, succeeded in being the fourth party in terms of voting rate and became the second party to increase its vote rate the most after the Union 90/Green Party when compared to the previous European Parliamentary Elections (EPE). The AfD sharply criticized the EU administrative structure and advocated that radical changes should be made within the EU in the election campaign, in which European scepticism was felt intensely. In the study, it was aimed to reveal how the AfD reflected the EU administrative structure, what messages it gave against EU policies by examining the election campaign of the AfD on European scepticism in the 2019 and 2024 EPE. For this purpose, the election video prepared by the AfD for the election campaign was analyzed semiotically using the Organon Model of linguist Bühler. In the findings obtained, it was revealed that there was an attempt to form perceptions that the EU policies are to the detriment of Germany through video. In this way, it was concluded that the AfD tried to convince the German people that Germany should act more independently within the EU.

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  • Journal IconÜçüncü Sektör Sosyal Ekonomi Dergisi
  • Publication Date IconJun 16, 2025
  • Author Icon Elif Hatun Kiliçbeyli̇ + 1
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POLITICAL ASPECTS AND CHALLENGES OF UKRAINE’S EUROPEAN INTEGRATION

«Integration» in translation from the Latin means «integration» – restoration, unification into a whole. The term «economic integration» is characteristic for describing modern international politics and processes of regional and global rapprochement. Integration processes began in Europe after the Second World War, when joint efforts were necessary for rebuilding, to ensure peace and security on the continent. Thus, begins the process of institutionalizing a united Europe, culminating in the formation of the European Union. One of the common policies of the Union is the EU's foreign policy, toward third countries which includes cooperation with the possibility of further integration as a full member of the community. Cooperation between Ukraine and the EU began with the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement and reached the stage of Ukraine receiving the status of a candidate country and announcing the start of pre-accession negotiations.

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  • Journal IconBaltic Journal of Legal and Social Sciences
  • Publication Date IconJun 11, 2025
  • Author Icon Nadiia Kichera
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Who Can Afford to Decarbonize? Early Insights from a Socioeconomic Model for Energy Retrofit Decision-Making

The real estate sector is steadily moving towards zero-emission buildings, driven by EU policies to achieve near-zero energy (NZEB) buildings by 2050. In Italy, more than 70% of residential buildings fall into the lower energy classes, and this mainly affects low-income households. As a result, the decarbonisation of the real estate sector presents both technical and socio-economic obstacles. Building on these premises, this study introduces the Retrofit Optimization Problem (ROP), a methodological framework adapted from the Multidimensional Knapsack Problem (MdKP). This method is used in this study to conduct a qualitative analysis of accessibility to retrofit between different socio-economic groups, integrating constraints to simulate restructuring capacity based on different incomes. The results show significant disparities: although many retrofit strategies can meet regulatory energy performance targets, only a small number are financially sustainable for low-income households. In addition, interventions with the greatest environmental impact remain inaccessible to vulnerable groups. These preliminary results highlight important equity issues in the energy transition, indicating the need for specific and income-sensitive policies to prevent decarbonisation efforts from exacerbating social inequalities or increasing the risk of assets being stranded in the housing market.

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  • Journal IconReal Estate
  • Publication Date IconJun 11, 2025
  • Author Icon Daniela Tavano + 4
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The asymmetry of EU socio-economic governance: theoretical fault lines and constructivist avenues for future research

ABSTRACT This contribution provides an analysis of scholarly disagreements over Fritz Scharpf’s thesis positing a pro-market bias of EU socio-economic governance. It first identifies three theoretical fault lines in the debate pertaining to (a) the meta-theoretical debate pitching legal-institutional structures against political agency in EU policy making; (b) the effectiveness of positive integration in addressing the ills of negative integration; (c) the (re)conceptualisation of the EU polity. For each of these, it then proposes avenues for future research to enlighten these dark matters from a constructivist perspective. How can we study the intrinsic contingency of politics, e.g., the construal of time or the ‘political work’ performed by agents which may lead to positive integration despite institutional constraints? How can we reconceive the role of the EU, moving beyond the idea that it should take the form of a supranational social market economy? All in all, it is argued that the institutional drivers of negative integration are ultimately politically constructed. Arguably, they powerfully shaped political agency in an era when the politics of EU integration were dominated by ordoliberal ideas promoting market making. Whether we will be witnessing the fading of this vision, or its enduring resilience remains an open question.

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  • Journal IconJournal of European Public Policy
  • Publication Date IconJun 11, 2025
  • Author Icon Amandine Crespy
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GREEN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES IMPLEMENTATION IN THE EU ELECTRIC VEHICLE MARKET IN THE CONTEXT OF THE GREEN SMART TRANSPORT CONCEPT

In this article, the features of implementing green energy technologies in the European Union's electric vehicle market are explored in the context of realizing the concept of green smart transport. The article identifies key technological innovation directions that contribute to emissions reduction and improved energy efficiency, such as the implementation of fuel cells, supercapacitors, and intelligent energy management systems, which optimize the operation of electric and hybrid vehicles. The aim of the article is to investigate current trends in the implementation of green energy technologies in the EU electric vehicle market and to develop scientific and practical recommendations for intensifying the digital transformation of the transport sector within the framework of the green intelligent transport concept. The methodological framework of the study is based on qualitative analysis, which includes comparative and structural research of key aspects of implementing green energy technologies in the EU's transport system. The study uses methods of system and contextual analysis to explore their integration into transport infrastructure and EU policies. Particular attention is given to strategic directions for the implementation of digital technologies in the EU's transport infrastructure, including the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and the interoperability of charging infrastructure. The importance of coordinating digital solutions at the European level to ensure the integration of vehicles, infrastructure, and energy systems is emphasized. Scientific and practical recommendations are proposed to accelerate the implementation of digital solutions in the European electric vehicle market aimed at creating a unified, environmentally clean, and efficient transport environment within the EU. The findings can be useful for developing policies on energy transformation, shaping strategic directions for the sustainable development of transport systems, and integrating cutting-edge technologies at the level of European countries.

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  • Journal IconEconomic scope
  • Publication Date IconJun 10, 2025
  • Author Icon Oleksii Honcharov + 1
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The European Green Deal: greenwashing compounded by deregulation (Omnibus law) or a genuine paradigm shift?

Abstract The green transition promoted by the European Green Deal (EGD) is not simply a matter of achieving climate neutrality by 2050. This macro-objective enshrined in European Climate Law (ECL) is complemented by the objectives of zero pollution and ecological resilience. These three intertwined objectives further manifest themselves in a myriad of sub-objectives, which are to be achieved through an array of interconnected regulatory and financial measures falling with the scope of energy, industrial, transport, external trade, agricultural and environmental policies. The genius of the EGD reform lies precisely in the fact that it articulates a number of complementary objectives whilst also operating within the framework of several EU policies. The aim of this article is to assess whether the 160 legislative instruments implementing the EGD amount to greenwashing of EU economic policies or whether they are in actual fact testament to a paradigm shift. This issue is all the more topical now that several simplification proposals have been proposed by the European Commission.

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  • Journal IconEuropean Journal of Risk Regulation
  • Publication Date IconJun 9, 2025
  • Author Icon Nicolas De Sadeleer
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On the environmental fragilities of digital solutionism. Articulating ‘digital’ and ‘green’ in the EU’s ‘twin transition’

ABSTRACT Since 2019, the European Union has championed a novel approach to addressing the mounting environmental crises: the so-called ‘twin transition.’ This concept posits that digital innovations and sustainability objectives can reinforce one another, fostering a mutually beneficial relationship. The increasing prominence of the twin transition in policymaking and related discourses seems to subtly reconfigure the very framework of environmental governance. Its pervasive use renders it a quintessential buzzword – albeit a unique one, as it fuses two already prevalent terms: the ‘digital transition’ and the ‘green transition.’ This article explores how the twin transition is constructed within EU policy discourse, examining how these two initially separate transitions are brought together. This integration, however, is asymmetric: the logic of digital solutionism increasingly shapes what qualifies as an environmental problem, thereby digitally framing sustainability challenges. Yet, the fragility of this articulation becomes increasingly apparent. The environmental impacts of digital technologies themselves expose cracks in the assumed synergy between ‘digital’ and ‘green.’ This provides a critical perspective on the digital-solutionist tendencies shaping contemporary environmental governance. Moving beyond these limitations would open new avenues for constructing more multi-dimensional, collectively imagined problem-solving frameworks – ones that harness the potential of digital technologies while acknowledging also its limitations.

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  • Journal IconJournal of Environmental Policy & Planning
  • Publication Date IconJun 5, 2025
  • Author Icon Carsten Horn + 1
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4th generation of warfare agents - Novichoks: Threats, problems, challenges for the security of the armed forces and civilian population.

4th generation of warfare agents - Novichoks: Threats, problems, challenges for the security of the armed forces and civilian population.

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  • Journal IconFood and chemical toxicology : an international journal published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association
  • Publication Date IconJun 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Barbara Wiaderek + 5
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The development/renewable energy nexus in Georgia and Tunisia: Coalitions of support and opposition to EU energy policies

This article analyses the European Union’s efforts to influence the energy governance beyond its borders. Focusing on EU support for renewable energy policies in Georgia and Tunisia as part of European Green Deal and other EU policy frameworks, we emphasize the importance of business actors, civil society and resistance movements in supporting and contesting the implementation of EU norms. We propose conceptual framework that integrates a critical reassessment of external governance literature with a configurational and decentralised approach to EU external action. This perspective reframes the external dimension of the European Green Deal by moving beyond an EU-centric lens to consider the roles of other international organisations and the autonomy of domestic actors in pursuing their strategies. Both case studies highlight the importance of support coalitions but also domestic contestations and transnational actor configurations.

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  • Journal IconInternational Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics
  • Publication Date IconJun 1, 2025
  • Author Icon Nathalie Ferré + 2
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