EU STRATEGIC AUTONOMY AND THE RUSSIAN WAR IN UKRAINE: TOWARDS A FIFTH WAVE? A neoclassical realist analysis
Abstract
This thesis analyses the development of the concept of strategic autonomy in the EU's crisis
management following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Preceding crises affecting the EU have
led to further EU integration, including for crisis management at the EU level, and previous
research implies that crises have been important factors in the previous four waves of debate
on strategic autonomy. The central aim of this thesis is to determine the existence and essence
of a fifth wave induced by the war in Ukraine by utilising a neoclassical realist analysis. A
qualitative content analysis on EU crisis management documents combined with think-tank
analyses is applied for comparison of the strategic autonomy concept before and after the
invasion. A complementary theory-driven process-tracing analysis controls for how the actors
of concern in this thesis (the European Commission, the Council, and the High
Representative/Vice-President) have shaped this concept. The findings indicate considerable
development across several aspects of the strategic autonomy concept as a consequence of the
war. In line with neoclassical realist theoretical assumptions, differences are also addressed
between the actors, which is of interest for the progression of the nexus between crisis
management and strategic autonomy. Taken together, the findings demonstrate the emergence
of a fifth wave, shaped by previous dependence on, and threat from, Russia. By utilising
neoclassical realism to analyse the conceptual debate on strategic autonomy, this thesis provides
theoretical and empirical evidence for a fifth wave of conceptual development on the
relationship between strategic autonomy and EU crisis management.
Degree
Master theses
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2024-06-24Author
Otter, Kristoffer
Keywords
Strategic autonomy, Crisis management, Transboundary crises, Neoclassical realism
Language
eng