Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.
Just tap then “Add to Home Screen”
Transatlantic relations, defined as the overall set of relations between the European Union and the United States within the broader framework of the institutional and other connections (Smith 2018), have been a key feature of international relations since the end of World War II, forming the very core of and largely defining the post war ‘International Liberal Order.’ In light of a changing US foreign policy not least under Trump, EU crises and a more volatile geopolitical environment with rising and more assertive powers China and Russia, recent studies suggest that this relationship may be weakening. This panel explores if and how transatlantic relations are changing in a changing international context, focusing in particular on EU-US security and defence relations.
| Title | Details |
|---|---|
| Space Security and the Transatlantic Relationship | View Paper Details |
| ‘Negative Sovereignty’ Pays Off in West Africa: The EU is the Weaker Part Vis-A-Vis the Sahel | View Paper Details |
| EU-US Security Relations in Africa | View Paper Details |
| US-EU Monetary and Financial Relations. Complex Interdependence Under Financialization | View Paper Details |
| Transatlantic Relations and (the Inexistence Of) Coherence | View Paper Details |