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Understanding Postcolonialism in the EU’s Migration Governance in the Southern Neighbourhood

Pastor Vidal, Pablo LU (2024) In 20 Years from the ENP: De-Neighbouring EU-MENA Relations in Times of Hard Politics 1(1). p.24-37
Abstract
This chapter critically examines the European Union's (EU) discourse towards the Southern Neighbourhood. The central argument is that, following poststructuralism, the EU's construction of itself as an actor in the region is problematic, given its claims to civilizational values and the imposition of norms of good governance that have been legitimised through the framework of Normative Power Europe (NPE). The research question asks how the logics and rationalities of the EU's good governance discourse produce a set of norms under the ENP tools to enforce migration governance in the Southern Neighbourhood. This question is explored through the governmentality approach, which explains how norms and values are assumed and enforced. The case... (More)
This chapter critically examines the European Union's (EU) discourse towards the Southern Neighbourhood. The central argument is that, following poststructuralism, the EU's construction of itself as an actor in the region is problematic, given its claims to civilizational values and the imposition of norms of good governance that have been legitimised through the framework of Normative Power Europe (NPE). The research question asks how the logics and rationalities of the EU's good governance discourse produce a set of norms under the ENP tools to enforce migration governance in the Southern Neighbourhood. This question is explored through the governmentality approach, which explains how norms and values are assumed and enforced. The case studies of Lebanon and Morocco, with their different political systems and history of engagement with the EU, demonstrate how good governance and its particular component of migration is central to the EU’s foreign policy and its relationship with the neighbourhood. Moreover, this chapter draws from postcolonial literature in the MENA region. The methodology employed is critical discourse analysis (CDA), using a discourse historical approach (DHA) that places historical and governmental context at the centre of identity construction through language. The analysis takes into account the Moroccan and Lebanese contexts to address the scholarly gap in the literature linking migration governance critical theories applied to the southern neighbourhood. It concludes that the concept of ‘migration good governance’ must be decolonized. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to specialist publication or newspaper
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Human rights, Mänskliga rättigheter
in
20 Years from the ENP: De-Neighbouring EU-MENA Relations in Times of Hard Politics
volume
1
issue
1
pages
14 pages
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
beeaac02-4fae-4517-8950-8a44f62170be
alternative location
https://esthinktank.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/EU-MENA-SPECIAL-ISSUE-VOL.1-ISSUE-1.pdf
date added to LUP
2025-10-12 13:31:46
date last changed
2025-10-13 13:38:52
@misc{beeaac02-4fae-4517-8950-8a44f62170be,
  abstract     = {{This chapter critically examines the European Union's (EU) discourse towards the Southern Neighbourhood. The central argument is that, following poststructuralism, the EU's construction of itself as an actor in the region is problematic, given its claims to civilizational values and the imposition of norms of good governance that have been legitimised through the framework of Normative Power Europe (NPE). The research question asks how the logics and rationalities of the EU's good governance discourse produce a set of norms under the ENP tools to enforce migration governance in the Southern Neighbourhood. This question is explored through the governmentality approach, which explains how norms and values are assumed and enforced. The case studies of Lebanon and Morocco, with their different political systems and history of engagement with the EU, demonstrate how good governance and its particular component of migration is central to the EU’s foreign policy and its relationship with the neighbourhood. Moreover, this chapter draws from postcolonial literature in the MENA region. The methodology employed is critical discourse analysis (CDA), using a discourse historical approach (DHA) that places historical and governmental context at the centre of identity construction through language. The analysis takes into account the Moroccan and Lebanese contexts to address the scholarly gap in the literature linking migration governance critical theories applied to the southern neighbourhood. It concludes that the concept of ‘migration good governance’ must be decolonized.}},
  author       = {{Pastor Vidal, Pablo}},
  keywords     = {{Human rights; Mänskliga rättigheter}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{24--37}},
  series       = {{20 Years from the ENP: De-Neighbouring EU-MENA Relations in Times of Hard Politics}},
  title        = {{Understanding Postcolonialism in the EU’s Migration Governance in the Southern Neighbourhood}},
  url          = {{https://esthinktank.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/EU-MENA-SPECIAL-ISSUE-VOL.1-ISSUE-1.pdf}},
  volume       = {{1}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}