This book proposes a new understanding of resilience, both as a quality and a way of thinking, taking it to the level of 'the person' and 'the local', to argue that a more sustainable way to govern the world today is bottom-up and inside-out.
Elena A. Korosteleva is Professor of International Politics and Jean Monnet Chair of European Politics at the School of Politics and International Relations, University of Kent, UK. Elena is Co-founder and Director of the Global Europe Centre, Canterbury, UK, and Principal Investigator for the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) COMPASS project (ES/P010849/1), focusing on resilience and governance in (Eastern) Europe and Central Asia. She has published widely in the journals Contemporary Security Policy, Journal of International Relations and Development, Cooperation and Conflict, Democratization and International Relations.
Trine Flockhart is Professor of International Relations and Co-Director of the Centre for War Studies at the University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark, and Founder and President of Women in International Security-Denmark (WIIS-DK), Copenhagen, Denmark. Her research focuses on international order and transformational change, NATO and transatlantic relations. Her article 'The Coming Multi-Order World' published in Contemporary Security Policy (2016) was awarded the Bernard Brodie Prize that same year.
Introduction: Resilience in EU and international institutions: Redefining local ownership in a new global governance agenda
Elena Korosteleva and Trine Flockhart
PART I. Conceptual Debates
1. Resilience and the role of the European Union in the world
Nathalie Tocci
2. Security through societal resilience: Contemporary challenges in the Anthropocene
David Chandler
3. Reclaiming resilience back: A local turn in EU external governance
Elena Korosteleva
PART II. Empirical Debates
4. Resilience is "always more" than our practices: Limits, critiques, and scepticism about international intervention
Pol Bargues
5. A promise not fulfilled: The (non) implementation of the resilience turn in EU peacebuilding
Jonathan Joseph and Ana Juncos
6. Under the guise of resilience: The EU approach to migration and forced displacement in Jordan and Lebanon
Rosanne Anholt and Giulia Sinatti
7. From principle to practice? The resilience-local ownership nexus in the EU Eastern Partnership Policy
Irina Petrova and Laure Delcour
PART III. Theoretical Debates
8. Is this the end? Resilience, ontological security, and the crisis of the liberal international order
Trine Flockhart
9. Russia, rivalry and resilience: Liberal order in crisis and international society in flux
Zachary Paikin
10. Countering precarity: social resilience through the political economy of trust
Albena Azmanova
Conclusion: European vulnerability and the policy dilemmas of resilience in times of coronavirus
Pol Bargues