Lexington Books
Pages: 248
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-7936-0775-1 • Hardback • June 2021 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-7936-0776-8 • eBook • June 2021 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Vladimir Vučković is lecturer in the Department of International Relations and European Studies at Masaryk University.
Chapter 1: Theoretical Background and Methodological Framework
Chapter 2: Judicial Reform in Montenegro
Chapter 3: Fight against Corruption in Montenegro
Chapter 4: Regional Cooperation and Developing Good Bilateral Relations with the Enlargement Countries and Member States
Chapter 5: Discussion on Mechanisms of Europeanization Presented in the Case Study of Montenegro
This book not only makes an important contribution to understanding the ways in which EU conditionalities work in practice in the Western Balkans, but it also demonstrates that Europeanization, as theorized by Schimmelfennig and Sedelmeier does not apply to the analysis of the integration process in these countries. This work can serve as a starting point in the development of other theories to explain the complex integration process of the Western Balkans. The volume can be used as a lesson to help candidate and potential EU members achieve a quick implementation of the acquis criteria, as it considers all the aspects of the interplay between EU, domestic, and international factors. The current context of the Russian aggression in Europe has given the Union the opportunity to recall its values, fight Euroscepticism, and regain citizens’ trust.... Vučković’s book contains important lessons and encourages further research on the role of domestic policies in the integration of Western Balkan countries in the EU, as well as on the geopolitical importance of this regions in general.
— Europe Now
The process of European Union enlargement to the Western Balkan states is complex and by no means perfect. It is based not only on the well-known mechanism of conditionality, but also on intricate engagements between the Union’s perpetually fluctuating normative power and its foreign policy interests with states and societies that are captured or fractured—or both. The wealth of empirical material in Vučković’s book shows the workings of these processes in Montenegro and offers a welcome contribution to understanding the troubled and non-linear transformation of the smallest of the post-Yugoslav states.
— Jelena Džankić, European University Institute
This important study shows how the EU accession process in the Western Balkans has failed to transformed the countries, illustrated with the case of Montenegro, long heralded the frontrunner of enlargement. This book thus sheds light on how EU enlargement lost its way and how it has supported state capture rather than the transformation of the region. It holds important lessons not just for Montenegro, but for the Western Balkans at large and EU enlargement.
— Florian Bieber, Professor of Southeast European Studies, University of Graz