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European Security

Volume 23, Issue 3, 2014

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Institutionalised cooperation and policy convergence in European defence: lessons from the relations between France, Germany and the UK
Articles

Institutionalised cooperation and policy convergence in European defence: lessons from the relations between France, Germany and the UK

DOI:
10.1080/09662839.2014.884073
Alice Panniera & Olivier Schmittb*

pages 270-289

Abstract

What are the prospects for trilateral concord among Britain, France and Germany in terms of defence policies? Would more institutionalised links among them lead to more convergence of their defence policies? To answer these interrogations, this article investigates the relation between policy convergence and institutionalised cooperation, in particular by studying whether and when one is a prerequisite to the other. First, this article examines the extent to which these countries' defence policies have converged since the end of the cold war based on several indicators: their attitudes towards international forums, their defence budgets, the structure of their armed forces and their willingness to use force. Second, we study each of the bilateral relations between the three states to qualitatively analyse their degree of institutionalisation and the convergence of their defence policies. This article concludes that contrary to the arguments of many discussions, think-tank reports and political actors, there is no evidence that institutionalised cooperation leads to policy convergence as far as defence is concerned.

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Details

  • Received: 22 Oct 2013
  • Accepted: 13 Jan 2014
  • Published online: 24 Feb 2014

Author affiliations

  • a CERI, Sciences Po Paris, Paris, France
  • b Department of War Studies, King's College London, London, UK

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