Affiliation:
1. University of Fribourg valbru85@gmail.com
2. National University of Colombia gfinzi@unal.edu.co
Abstract
The decade following the great economic and financial crisis of
2008 saw the European Union demanding regional leadership. The EU has
also suffered a number of other existential crises, such as the ongoing refugee
crisis, the Ukraine-Russia military confrontation, the revival of nationalism
and radical right-wing populism, alongside the “trade war” between the
United States and the EU. The article develops a novel theoretical framework
structuring leadership as a peculiar typology of power, characterized by the
capacity of both including “followership” countries’ interests and providing
crisis management. Our central argument is that Germany responded strategically
to leadership demand in Europe through a positive power role, exhibiting
the inclusion of followership and multilateral leadership rather than
hegemonic, together with crisis management skills based on solid influence
over regional outcomes. Conclusions are drawn from five key case studies
drawn from different policy areas.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies
Cited by
4 articles.
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