THE ROMANIAN PRESIDENCY OF THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. GREAT EXPECTATIONS?
THE ROMANIAN PRESIDENCY OF THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. GREAT EXPECTATIONS?
Author(s): Natalia Cugleşan, Goran IlikSubject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Politics, Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Political Theory, Political Sciences, Governance, Public Administration, Public Law, Government/Political systems, Electoral systems, Welfare systems, Politics and law, History and theory of political science, Methodology and research technology, Comparative politics, EU-Accession / EU-DEvelopment, EU-Legislation
Published by: Institute for Research and European Studies - Bitola
Keywords: EU Council Presidency; Performance; Romania; New Member States; Post-Accession
Summary/Abstract: The post-accession evolution of the new Member States to the European Union benefits from limited attention in the EU studies literature. More scholarly works are needed to map the performance of Romania and Bulgaria. Therefore, this paper investigates Romania's performance during the six-month Council Presidency to the European Union in the first half of 2019. Building on the framework of analysis of Karolewski et al., the paper makes an empirical contribution. It seeks to analyze if Romania lived up to the challenges of the office and managed to consolidate its reputation and show its political maturity during this crucial political moment, which countries only get to play every twelve years. The paper argues that the Romanian government aimed to project the image of an active, dynamic, and efficient actor, consensus orientated but without significant policy ambitions. It was a test it wanted to pass to confirm that Romania no longer represents an exceptional case in terms of its laggardness
Journal: Journal of Liberty and International Affairs
- Issue Year: 8/2022
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 459-474
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English