Australia, Britain and the EU
Summary :
Table of Contents
- Introduction.
- Trade: A healthy and growing relationship.
- 2006 trade results.
- Australia, the EU and wine: A 'special relationship'.
- The EU and its increasing role on the world scene: what consequences for its relationship with Australia?
- A growing interest in Asia.
- A growing focus on security and the fight against terrorism.
- The climate dispute: A key issue.
- The future of the relationship.
- Conclusion.
- Bibliography.
Abstract
In his article, "australia, britain and the European Union", David Goldsworthy distinguishes three key themes of the relationship between australia and the EU: its extreme asymmetry, its focus on trade and the particular role of the United Kingdom. According to him, these factors contribute in one way or another to the relative weakness of the relationship. The asymmetry is easy to grasp. As Goldworthy succinctly puts it, australia needs the EU a good deal more than the EU needs australia. On the other hand, australia and Europe do share common values as Western capitalistic countries as well as a common history, linguistic and cultural links... The focus on britain, the "historical" partner of australia, should not hide the fact that Europe had greatly evolved in the past 50 years. The "Old Continent" has reinvented itself, and its relationship with australia should not be defined only through britain anymore.
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