The Eastern Partnership Policy was officially launched in 2009 and its main objective is to start a dialogue and enhance cooperation with EU’s Eastern neighbors: Belarus, Ukraine, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Moldova in the areas such as trade, migration, energy and politics. In recent years, the relations between the EU and the members of the Eastern Partnership developed in different ways. Countries have responded differently to the same initial offer by the European Union. Association Agreements could only be concluded with Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. Consequences and challenges were analyzed at the 6th conference of Network Europe.
Andreas Kellerhals
Association and Full EU Membership of Bulgaria - Some recent considerations Association of the eastern partners of the EU - from the perspective of the Polish lawyer ENP and the Establishment of the Single Space for Security in Europe Europe on the Crossroad - Cold War or Creation of a Common Space of Peace, Security and Development From the PCA to the Association Agreement - Some considerations on the scope of approximation Switzerland's referendum "against mass immigration" - Implications for the European integration process The "Eastern Brinkmanship" - legal aspects of the current crisis in the EU-Russia relations The Association Agreement between the European Union and Ukraine - one of the steps to Ukraine's Europeanization The Eastern Partnership: potential impact on corruption in Ukraine The eastern Partnership and the european integration process from the Serbian perspective