Publication

6 Nov 2012

Regional integration has long been seen as an effective tool for encouraging regional peace, stability, and prosperity, with the added expectation that economic growth may also facilitate transition to democracy. Working on these same assumptions, the EU and Turkey have developed different approaches to regional integration. The EU sought to develop institutional integration through the Euro- Mediterranean Partnership (EMP), the European Neighborhood Policy (ENP), and the subsequent Union for the Mediterranean (UfM), while Turkey — increasingly becoming a “trading state” — has multiplied and diversified its economic interactions with the Maghreb and Mashreq countries. The Arab Spring has led to a critical assessment of these practices. So what are the challenges and opportunities that regional integration faces in the wake of the Arab Spring?

Download English (PDF, 11 pages, 388 KB)
Author Kemal Kirişci
Series IAI Global Turkey in Europe Working Papers
Issue 1
Publisher Istanbul Policy Center (IPC)
Copyright © 2012 Istituto Affari Internazionali
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