15 resultados para OPERATIONS RESEARCH

em Archive of European Integration


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Food policy is one the most regulated policy fields at the EU level. â˜Unholy alliancesâ are collaborative patterns that temporarily bring together antagonistic stakeholders behind a common cause. This paper deals with such â˜transversalâ co-operations between citizensâ groups (NGOs, consumers associationsâ¦) and economic stakeholders (food industries, retailersâ¦), focusing on their ambitions and consequences. This paper builds on two case studies that enable a more nuanced view on the perspectives for the development of transversal networks at the EU level. The main findings are that (i) the rationale behind the adoption of collaborative partnerships actually comes from a case-by-case cost/benefit analysis leading to hopes of improved access to institutions; (ii) membership of a collaborative network leads to a learning process closely linked to the networkâs performance; and (iii) coalitions can have a better reception â rather than an automatic better access â depending on several factors independent of the stakeholders themselves.

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The European Union (EU) has played an important, yet inconsistent role in the Israel-Palestine conflict since the1980 Venice Declaration. This paper analyses how the EUâs role as a mediator has changed more recently in the Israel-Gaza conflict. Specifically, it examines how the â˜Concept on Strengthening EU Mediation and Dialogue Capacitiesâ adopted in 2009 and the creation of the European External Action Service and the High Representative by the Lisbon Treaty have changed the EUâs resources and strategies as a mediator as well as how these developments improved cooperation and coordination with other mediators. This analysis is done through a comparison of the EUâs role in the Israeli Operation Cast Lead in 2008/2009 and Operation Protective Edge in 2014. It is argued that the aforementioned changes made the EU a more capable mediator and facilitated internal coordination. However, these changes did not create more resources for the EU as a mediator, rather they changed how the EU used its resources.