The process of the regionalisation of foreign and security policies, its conditions of
emergence and evolution, is the core object of study of this doctoral thesis. This
research has two aims, first it seeks to construct a new framework to understand and
conceptualise regionalisation processes and second, applying this framework to draw
conclusions on the paths these processes take in West Africa and South America.
In this research I take issue with the way in which IR approaches present regional
projects as the ‘natural’ or ‘rational’ response of nation states to a combination of
objective and ideational factors. A more thorough explanation requires an account of the
ways in which these factors are themselves constituted, maintained and shaped by
discourses and power relations between the relevant actors, as well as through the
concrete practices the actors deploy. I thus conceptualise regionalisation as an interplay
between discourses and practices of actors ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ the region.
Methodologically, the analysis uses a poststructuralist discourse analysis and an
interpretative process tracing that relies mainly on ethnographic work.
The key empirical findings of this thesis are twofold. First, historically constituted
discourses are crucial in determining the form and extent of the regionalisation process
– in particular the key articulations linking the concepts of state/nation and region.
Second, the comparison allowed me to demonstrate that regions are not independent
units: they are part of an international system where actors (re)produce discourses
carrying certain norms, concepts and meanings such as ‘security’, ‘development’,
‘regional integration’, etc. It is precisely the encounter between the regional and
‘external’ actors discourses which constitutes the process of regionalisation. The
meaning given to security, in particular, which emerges at the intersection of these
discourses, decisively frames the process towards either cooperation between sovereign
states or the building of a regional political community.The process of the regionalisation of foreign and security policies, its conditions of
emergence and evolution, is the core object of study of this doctoral thesis. This
research has two aims, first it seeks to construct a new framework to understand and
conceptualise regionalisation processes and second, applying this framework to draw
conclusions on the paths these processes take in West Africa and South America.
In this research I take issue with the way in which IR approaches present regional
projects as the ‘natural’ or ‘rational’ response of nation states to a combination of
objective and ideational factors. A more thorough explanation requires an account of the
ways in which these factors are themselves constituted, maintained and shaped by
discourses and power relations between the relevant actors, as well as through the
concrete practices the actors deploy. I thus conceptualise regionalisation as an interplay
between discourses and practices of actors ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ the region.
Methodologically, the analysis uses a poststructuralist discourse analysis and an
interpretative process tracing that relies mainly on ethnographic work.
The key empirical findings of this thesis are twofold. First, historically constituted
discourses are crucial in determining the form and extent of the regionalisation process
– in particular the key articulations linking the concepts of state/nation and region.
Second, the comparison allowed me to demonstrate that regions are not independent
units: they are part of an international system where actors (re)produce discourses
carrying certain norms, concepts and meanings such as ‘security’, ‘development’,
‘regional integration’, etc. It is precisely the encounter between the regional and
‘external’ actors discourses which constitutes the process of regionalisation. The
meaning given to security, in particular, which emerges at the intersection of these
discourses, decisively frames the process towards either cooperation between sovereign
states or the building of a regional political community.LUISS PhD Thesi
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