Chapter 7 EU Role Conceptions and Role Expectations towards the V4
Abstract
Applying role theory and Putnam’s two-level game framework to the European migration crisis of 2015, Magdalena Kozub-Karkut expertly shows how the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Poland used the crisis to contest their roles in the European Union (EU) and how each country and the V4, as a group, subsequently used their new contested roles in the bargaining process within the EU structures. In doing so, Kozub-Karkut demonstrates how international negotiations might be used by the chief negotiators as a way of triggering contestation and enhancing their position at the domestic level as well as how role contestation processes from the domestic level might be used at the international one. Two-Level Role Theory and EU Migration is an excellent resource for scholars and students of Foreign Policy Analysis, International Relations Theory, European Studies, and Migrations Studies
Keywords
International Relations,International Relations Theory,Foreign Policy,Role Theory,Two-level Game Theory,RD Putnam,Bargaining Theory,Migration Studies,European Union,European Union Policy,Visegrad GroupDOI
10.4324/9781003582656-8ISBN
9781032786261, 9781003582656Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2025Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Politics and government
International relations
Society and culture: general