Will Europe’s bloody summer change migration policy?
With every terrorist attack, anti-migration parties will have a larger platform, but they will struggle to change policy
With every terrorist attack, anti-migration parties will have a larger platform, but they will struggle to change policy
Two new publications from the European Council of Foreign Relations look at the real issues behind the question of market economy status
Am 23. Juni setzten wir gemeinsam mit der Stiftung Mercator mit “What does Israel think about Europe? And why?” die Reihe „Europe seen from the outside“ fort.
Die-hard sovereigntists may wish to preserve the Englishman’s historic right to bathe in his own sewage, or be treated in A&E by an exhausted doctor – most of us will be glad that EU membership from time to time pushes our own authorities to do the right thing
Why are the Brexiteers so worried about the American President’s intervention in the referendum campaign?
Interview to Yevhen Hlibovytsky, Ukrainian intellectual, co-founder of the Nestor Group on the future of Ukraine
Richard Gowan, Senior Policy Fellow at ECFR and Professor at Columbia University, explains why the EU received a B- for how it dealt with…
Jeremy Shapiro, ECFR's Research Director, explains why the EU received a B grade for its foreign policies on the United States. You can…
Fredrik Wesslau, Director of ECFR's Wider Europe programme, explains why the EU received a B- for its policies on the Wider Europe region
Agatha Kratz, Associate Fellow for ECFR's Asia and China programme, explains why the EU received a C+ for its foreign policies on Asia and…