This article attempts to analyze the en ı ergence and development of EC/EU's Mediterranean Policy initiatives, the motives behind these initiatives, their degrees of success and failure and, finally, their future in context of the Middle East developments and especially Arab-Israeli conflict and Peace Process. After the overview of early relations between the EC and Mediterranean Countries in 1960s, the Global Mediterranean Policy which is designed in early 1970s and the Renovated Mediterranean Policy which is launched in late 1980s, it focuses on the overall assessment of the Barcelona Process, which is by far the most relevant of existing Euro-Med Initiatives, with its potential and difficulties in light of the results of the ministerial meetings from Malta in 1997 to Valencia in 2002.
This article attempts to analyze the en ı ergence and development of
EC/EU's Mediterranean Policy initiatives, the motives behind these initiatives,
their degrees of success and failure and, finally, their future in context of the
Middle East developments and especially Arab-Israeli conflict and Peace
Process. After the overview of early relations between the EC and
Mediterranean Countries in 1960s, the Global Mediterranean Policy which is
designed in early 1970s and the Renovated Mediterranean Policy which is
launched in late 1980s, it focuses on the overall assessment of the Barcelona
Process, which is by far the most relevant of existing Euro-Med Initiatives, with
its potential and difficulties in light of the results of the ministerial meetings
from Malta in 1997 to Valencia in 2002.
Primary Language | Turkish |
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Journal Section | Research Article |
Authors | |
Publication Date | May 1, 2003 |
Submission Date | January 1, 2003 |
Published in Issue | Year 2003 Volume: 3 Issue: 1 |