55 research outputs found
How Jean-Claude Juncker and Pierre Moscovici laid the groundwork for the EU’s post-COVID fiscal policy
The EU’s fiscal rules, which state that governments should run budget deficits no higher than 3% of GDP and maintain a public debt no higher than 60% of GDP, have been suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic and there are now growing calls for them to be reformed or abandoned altogether. Drawing on a new study, Frédéric Mérand documents how Jean-Claude Juncker, Pierre Moscovici and other figures within the European Commission laid the groundwork for this paradigm shift in EU fiscal governance
L’Europe dans la culture stratégique canadienne, 1949-2009
S’ appuyant sur la notion de culture stratégique, cet article démontre l’existence d’ une tension historique entre européanisme, continentalisme et internationalisme dans la politique étrangère canadienne. Cette tension fondatrice est explorée sur le plan conceptuel, mais également dans les prises de position concrètes des gouvernements et des partis politiques depuis la fin de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale. En s’ alignant plus ouvertement sur Washington, le gouvernement conservateur de Stephen Harper (2006-2009) est le premier à privilégier le continentalisme de manière aussi unidimensionnelle. Même si le déclin de l’ européanisme ne fait aucun doute, la résilience anticipée de la culture stratégique nous amène à relativiser cette tentative de transformation de la politique étrangère canadienne.Building on the notion of strategic culture, this article substantiates the existence of a historical tension between Europeanism, continentalism and internationalism in Canadian foreign policy. We explore this basic tension at the conceptual level, but also through the positions taken by governments and political parties since World War ii. We note that, by aligning itself on Washington, the Conservative government of Stephen Harper (2006-2009) is the first to privilege continentalism exclusively and at the expense of other perspectives. While the decline of Europeanism seems inevitable, the anticipated resilience of Canada’ s strategic culture leads us to question this attempt at transforming Canadian foreign policy
France’s Return to NATO: The Death Knell for ESDP?
Our article focuses on the likely impact of France's return to NATO's integrated military command on the future of the European security and defense policy (ESDP). First, we describe the triangular relationship between France's defense, NATO and European defense policies that dominated the era of the Gaullist–Mitterrandist consensus (1958–95) and its gradual erosion under Jacques Chirac's tenure (1995–2007). Second, we explain the context in which President Sarkozy made the decision in 2007 to rejoin the Allied military command. Relying on interviews with French foreign and defense policy-makers, we address the extent to which ESDP considerations really played a role. Finally, we develop four scenarios for the future of European defense: (1) ESDP gets a new lease of life; (2) France becomes a normal player in a NATO-dominated Europe; (3) NATO and ESDP work out of a division of labor; and (4) France becomes the Trojan horse of European cooperation inside NATO. To develop each scenario, we rely on rationalist and constructivist mechanisms drawn from International Relations theory
Hommage à Bastien Irondelle, 1973-2013
Les témoignages qui affluent depuis la disparition de Bastien Irondelle soulignent la générosité, l’intégrité et l’engagement intellectuel du jeune professeur de Sciences Po Paris. Ces qualités, reconnues de tous ne doivent pas nous faire oublier qu’il a aussi été un chercheur prolifique au CERI. En une décennie, Bastien Irondelle a publié pas moins de 4 ouvrages, 17 chapitres de livres, 21 articles scientifiques, 12 recensions ou lectures critiques et 11 rapports de recherche mandatés. Ce court texte résume les principales contributions de notre collègue et ami, décédé au Mans le 27 septembre 2013 [Premier paragraphe]
The polycrisis and EU security and defence competences
Published online: 10 June 2024From the 2009 sovereign debt crisis to the 2022 Russian full-scale war in Ukraine, the EU has experienced a succession of intersecting crises, or a ‘polycrisis’. We examine how this polycrisis has impacted the EU's role in security and defence. While the EU's competences in security and defence have long suffered from disagreements among member states, they have shown notable developments since Brexit, and most importantly, since the 2022 war in Ukraine. We make a two-step argument to shed light on why the polycrisis has had these differentiated effects over time. The first move we make is to unpack the polycrisis to explain why and when an increase in competences may take place. We single out two crises that offer pathways for positive politicisation, leading to increased cooperation and competences: an external military threat and an internal crisis in the form of the loss of a major veto player. In a second step, we argue that the existence of an alternative organisation, NATO, helps us explain where and what cooperation can take place. Shared military threats can lead to complementary rather than substitutive empowerment at least during the duration of the crisis
The GRAVITY+ Project: Towards All-sky, Faint-Science, High-Contrast Near-Infrared Interferometry at the VLTI
The GRAVITY instrument has been revolutionary for near-infrared
interferometry by pushing sensitivity and precision to previously unknown
limits. With the upgrade of GRAVITY and the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
(VLTI) in GRAVITY+, these limits will be pushed even further, with vastly
improved sky coverage, as well as faint-science and high-contrast capabilities.
This upgrade includes the implementation of wide-field off-axis
fringe-tracking, new adaptive optics systems on all Unit Telescopes, and laser
guide stars in an upgraded facility. GRAVITY+ will open up the sky to the
measurement of black hole masses across cosmic time in hundreds of active
galactic nuclei, use the faint stars in the Galactic centre to probe General
Relativity, and enable the characterisation of dozens of young exoplanets to
study their formation, bearing the promise of another scientific revolution to
come at the VLTI.Comment: Published in the ESO Messenge
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