Religion and the EU's external policies: Increasing engagement
Since 11 September 2001, the European Union has been increasingly confronted by religious crises in a world in which globalisation is reshaping religious demography. In parallel with similar developments in the Member States and the United States, the EU has developed instruments to give greater consideration to religious trends when addressing human rights concerns and engaging key partner countries. Faith-based organisations are playing a pivotal role in a number of new fields, including climate change, development, and conflict resolution, and the EU is taking them increasingly into account. In addition, religion plays an important role in the internal and external policies of some key EU partners, as this study shows in annexes. That is why this field is slowly emerging as a new dimension in the EU's external policies. The annexes in this paper, concerning individual countries, were drafted by Naja Bentzen, Gisela Grieger, Beatrix Immenkamp, Elena Lazarou, Velina Lilyanova, Martin Russell, Alexandra Friede and Jessica Park.
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- ARBEJDE OG BESKÆFTIGELSE
- arbejdsmarkedspart
- arbejdsmarkedsrelationer og arbejdsret
- DEN EUROPÆISKE UNION
- EU-politik
- europæisk integration
- fri rådighed over egen person
- globalisering
- INTERNATIONALE RELATIONER
- konfessionel undervisning
- kultur og religion
- LOVBESTEMMELSER
- menneskerettigheder
- religiøs institution
- religiøs konflikt
- rettigheder og friheder
- samarbejdspolitik
- SOCIALE SPØRGSMÅL
- tredjeland
- UDDANNELSE OG KOMMUNIKATION
- undervisning
- ØKONOMI
- økonomisk politik