Resilience in the EU's foreign and security policy
The migratory pressure with which the European Union is struggling is yet more evidence that distance or the natural borders inherent in seas, mountains and deserts are of little significance when people are confronted with challenges like conflict, fragility or failure of governance. The scale of conflicts, natural hazards, water shortages and state collapse suggests that things will only get worse – unless a new policy paradigm is effectively implemented. Resilience – understood as the capacity of different layers of society to withstand, to adapt to, and to recover quickly from stresses and shocks – has gradually emerged as an answer to the growing complexity of the international security environment. In the EU context, the concept of resilience combines different policy areas: humanitarian aid, development assistance, disaster-risk reduction, climate-change adaptation, conflict prevention and peacebuilding. As a relatively new addition to EU jargon, the aim of building societal resilience still needs to be translated into tangible, practicable measures. This briefing complements an earlier briefing, Risk and resilience in foreign policy, published in September 2015.
Briefing
O dokumentu
Vrsta publikacije
Avtor
Politično področje
Ključna beseda
- DRUŽBENA IN SOCIALNA VPRAŠANJA
- družboslovne vede
- ekonomska geografija
- EVROPSKA UNIJA
- evropska varnost
- finance EU
- financiranje EU
- GEOGRAFIJA
- geopolitika
- GOSPODARSTVO
- graditev Evrope
- humanitarna pomoč
- mednarodna varnost
- mednarodna vloga EU
- mednarodne zadeve
- MEDNARODNI ODNOSI
- migracije
- migracijska politika EU
- nacionalni računi
- OKOLJE
- okoljska politika
- politika sodelovanja
- pomoč beguncem
- preprečevanje konfliktov
- preprečevanje okoljskega tveganja
- prilagoditev na podnebne spremembe
- razvojna pomoč
- revščina
- samooskrba s hrano
- skupna zunanja in varnostna politika
- sredozemske države nečlanice EU
- ZNANOST