
If member states want EU foreign policy to become more relevant, they cannot continue to dismiss hard power as a tool for the EU.

Serbia and Kosovo agreed last month to exchange envoys for the first time in response to a broader European Union push for the two to improve relations.

What can be done to preserve the independence of the European media and ensure competition?

According to a recent study by the European Commission, nearly three-quarters of citizens in EU states perceive corruption as a major problem in their own countries.

Carnegie Europe's Judy Dempsey was on the ground at the 49th annual Munich Security Conference to give readers exclusive access to the debates and discussions as they unfolded.

India and Europe are not so different. Both have had to rethink their place in the world, which has forced them to re-examine their relationships with global players.

Bureaucracy in the more mainstream funding channels and a weakening commitment to human rights at the European Council mean that hopes are high for a new body aimed at promoting democracy.

Poland is pushing for stable, prosperous, and democratic states in its own neighborhood and beyond.

Ukraine cannot afford to set an overly broad agenda for the OSCE. Kyiv must focus on a handful of opportunities that reinforce the vision of a Euro-Atlantic security community.

Recent developments in Europe’s post-Soviet neighborhood, in countries like Georgia and Ukraine, have highlighted the region’s struggling efforts for democratization.