Tidsskriftsartikel

The EU’s security and defence engagements in the Sahel region are challenged

New journal article on the EU’s role as a global security actor

Because of its geographical proximity to the EU, the Sahel region's perceived cross-border security threats of terror, migration and organized crime have become a top European security policy priority. Contributing to existing debates on EU external actions, the article develops the idea that the EU's engagement in the Sahel has become an attempt to construct and confirm the Union's ability to act as a global security actor. The article shows how the EU's actorness and ability to perform security are hampered by the lack of buy-in from their local partners, as narrating success in a context of escalating violence is increasingly implausible. Thus, while the EU's activities in Mali confirm the EU’s role as a security actor, the limited character and impact of the EU's activities on the ground also reinforce the idea of it as an ineffective actor. The article thereby provides fruitful input to discussions of the constitutive effects of everyday practices in interventions and the production of EU security actorness as played out in the Sahel. 

Access to the article Schizophrenic agendas in the EU's external actions in Mali click here. 

Regioner
EU Mali

DIIS Eksperter

Signe Marie Cold-Ravnkilde
Migration and global order
Senior Researcher
Christine Nissen
Foreign policy and diplomacy
Researcher
+45 9132 5429
International Affairs Volume 96 Issue 4 July 2020
Schizophrenic agendas in the EU's external actions in Mali
International Affairs, 96, 935–953, 2020