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So You’ve Been Fined Again by the EU
March 28, 2019 3 min. read

It is remarkable that large corporations do not employ many people in their organisations that have the foresight to warn their Directors that what they might be doing will not only subject them to record breaking fines by the EU, but will also cost them billions. I had time to ponder this while going through […]

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The EU at 60: Between Globalism and Nationalism
May 6, 2017 8 min. read

In their quest for power, populist parties prescribe protectionism and the reestablishment of national sovereignty as panacea to all of the EU’s ills.

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EU Funds Allocation: Is Brussels Flexing Its Muscles?
March 18, 2017 6 min. read

European Commissioner for Justice Vera Jourová proposed to make the distribution of EU funding dependent on whether states uphold fundamental EU principles like the rule of law.

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Central and Eastern Europe at odds with Brussels
September 27, 2016 5 min. read

The refugee crisis revealed the extent of the ideological parting of ways between old and new Europe.

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Greek Islanders To Be Nominated For Nobel Peace Prize
January 26, 2016 3 min. read

On remote Greek islands, grandmothers have sung terrified little babies to sleep, while teachers, pensioners and students have spent months offering food, shelter, clothing and comfort to refugees who have risked their lives to flee war and terror.

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Europe Debates its Future Climate Targets
February 7, 2014 9 min. read

The countries of the European Union tend to be viewed as the main advocates at the national level for developing a more comprehensive and binding global plan to tackle climate change. As the EU pushes forward, other nations have been stuck in neutral or have been retrenching. With the European economy continuously struggling to pick […]

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European Responses to Haiyan disaster
November 17, 2013 5 min. read

The Philippines were hurt by one of the strongest typhoons ever recorded. Typhoon Haiyan hit a highly populated area of the Philippines on November 7th and 8th. Apparently an estimated 10 millions people were affected by the Typhoon, and almost 3 million people have lost their livelihood. The death toll stood at 3,974 and over […]

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Can a Solar Tariff Spark a Trade War?
June 10, 2013 5 min. read

  The struggle for positioning in the solar energy marketplace took another turn. On June 4 Karel de Gucht, the European Commissioner for Trade, announced a new 11.8 percent tariff to be applied to imported Chinese made solar panels, and photovoltaic cells and polysilicon wafers, two system components. To avoid an additional increase escalating to […]

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Tough Talk, No Strategy? Increasing role of sanctions in EU Foreign Policy
January 23, 2013 8 min. read

As the EU is dragged into coping with the ongoing financial crisis, there has been a lively discussion what will be the consequences on the EU’s foreign policy in the long-term forecast. Most of the arguments deal with a question of how the nature of the EU Crisis Management will change in the upcoming years, as EU […]

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EU Kicks Off a New Fund to Help Oppressed
January 10, 2013 5 min. read

Pro-democracy and human rights movements beyond the EU borders will have a new access to grants from a budget of the newly established European Endowment for Democracy (EED). However, even though The Board of Governors of the EED held its meeting in Brussels on 9 January 2013, which also marks its official launch, the future […]

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European Endowment for Democracy: What is on the menu?
December 5, 2012 11 min. read

The socio-political development of the Arab Spring has been a real wake-up call for the EU’s policy-makers. Rapid changes in the South Mediterranean once again pointed the finger at the EU’s inability to act swiftly, decisively and audaciously to the events unfolding beyond the EU’s southern borders. Numerous policy changes have recently occurred in the […]

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