To meet the overall goal of the project, an analysis of EU documents and policies to identify the main trends and the main features that characterise EU foreign policy vis-à-vis the Mediterranean (and Israel/Palestine more specifically) was conducted. This was combined with a preliminary mapping of those actors that are potentially interested in shaping EU foreign policy and are hence potentially involved in lobbying activities. As a second step, a series of elite interviews with both representatives of interest groups and policy-makers were carried out with the aim of shedding light on the processes of framing and on which actors are involved in these processes. While most research focused on the EU’s level, the French case was also analysed. Understanding how France’s foreign policy vis-à-vis Israel has changed over time and in relation to EU foreign policy, and which frames shape it is fundamental to understand processes of Europeanization of foreign policy and European integration more broadly.
Main results:
1) Three articles in peer-review journals (two published, one under review). Given the considerable amount of material collected over the duration of the project, future research articles will be based on it. Four articles are currently in preparation and the submission of a special issue is also under consideration.
2) Co-editorship of a special issue in Mediterranean Politics on the impact of framing on EU policies towards the countries on the Southern shore of the Mediterranean.
3) Participation in five international conferences (ECPR, EISA, UACES, AFSP), invitation to two workshops on EU foreign policy vis-à-vis Israel and Palestine (London School of Economics and University of Copenhagen), invited talk on EU/Israel/Palestine (London School of Economics) and on framing in EU foreign policy (King’s College London).
4) Organisation of two workshop at Sciences Po Paris (Lobbying and Diplomacy in/of the EU: Two Faces of the Same Coin? in May 2017 and The Framing of Crises in Europe in December 2017).
5) Enlarged network of contacts within the academia and with policy-makers and representatives of interest groups in Brussels and in France.