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Venus Approaching Mars? The European Union's Approaches to Democracy Promotion in Comparative Perspective

Cover: Promoting Democracy and the Rule of Law: American and European Strategies

Cover: Promoting Democracy and the Rule of Law: American and European Strategies

Tanja A. Börzel, Thomas Risse – 2009

With the end of the Cold War, democracy promotion has been mainstreamed into the development strategies of international organizations such as the UN or the World Bank, but also of individual Western states such as the United States, or the Federal Republic of Germany. The EU is no exception. In fact, the EU has been among the first of any Western state or international organization to write human rights, democracy and the rule of war into its agreements with external partners. The Lomé IV agreement of 1989 between the EU and the so-called ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific Group, mostly former colonies of Great Britain, France and Belgium) was the first multilateral development agreement to include political conditionality. Ten years later, in 1999, the EU adopted the European Initiative for Development and Human Rights (EIDHR) as a comprehensive strategy ‘in support of democratization, the strengthening of the rule of law and the development of a pluralist and democratic civil society’ (EIDHR 976/1999, preamble).

Title
Venus Approaching Mars? The European Union's Approaches to Democracy Promotion in Comparative Perspective
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Location
Basingstoke
Keywords
Europe, democracy, Research Project A1, Research Project B2
Date
2009
Identifier
ISBN 978-0230220065
Appeared in
Magen, Amichai/Risse, Thomas/McFaul, Michael (eds.): Promoting Democracy and the Rule of Law: American and European Strategies, Governance and Limited Statehood Series, 34-60.
Language
eng
Type
Text