The Empire Strikes Back, or at Least It Tries
Der Vortrag wird von Dr. Tim Zajontz gehalten und ist Teil der Vorlesungsreihe "Infrastructure, Capitalism, and Dependency in the Digital Age".
Maintaining European influence across Africa has become a geostrategic priority in Europe’s capitals. Accordingly, Africa is deemed a pivotal ‘partner’ region in the context of the EU’s Global Gateway initiative. Based on interview research with Members of the European Parliament and Commission and EEAS staffers, the lecture traces the origins of the Global Gateway initiative, revealing inter- and intra-institutional controversies that have characterised its drafting process. The geopolitical and geoeconomic importance of Africa is shown to have grown in the perception of EU decision-makers and technocrats in the light of growing Chinese influence across the continent.
Maintaining European influence across Africa has become a geostrategic priority in Europe’s capitals. Accordingly, Africa is deemed a pivotal ‘partner’ region in the context of the EU’s Global Gateway initiative. Based on interview research with Members of the European Parliament and Commission and EEAS staffers, the lecture traces the origins of the Global Gateway initiative, revealing inter- and intra-institutional controversies that have characterised its drafting process. The geopolitical and geoeconomic importance of Africa is shown to have grown in the perception of EU decision-makers and technocrats in the light of growing Chinese influence across the continent.
Zeit
Montag, 16.06.25 - 18:15 Uhr
- 19:45 Uhr
Veranstaltungsformat
Ringvorlesung
Themengebiet
Europäische Union, Afrika, ,,Global Gateway Initiative"
Zielgruppen
Studierende
Wissenschaftler*innen
Alle Interessierten
Sprachen
Englisch
Ort
Hörsaal XIII, Hauptgebäude der Universität Bonn
Reservierung
nicht erforderlich
Weitere Informationen
Veranstalter
CASSIS
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