![]()
Download full text
(external source)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v10i1.4693
Exports for your reference manager
A Post-Development Perspective on the EU's Generalized Scheme of Preferences
[journal article]
Abstract Trade policy is generally considered to be a key leverage in the pursuit of labor norms, environmental standards, and human rights. This is even more so for the European Union (EU), which exerts an extensive market power and exclusive competences in trade while lacking a full-fledged foreign policy.... view more
Trade policy is generally considered to be a key leverage in the pursuit of labor norms, environmental standards, and human rights. This is even more so for the European Union (EU), which exerts an extensive market power and exclusive competences in trade while lacking a full-fledged foreign policy. In recent years, there has been a growing demand for making sustainable development provisions "enforceable" and for more frequently applying trade sanctions. Taking a post-development perspective, we interrogate the EU's enforceability discourse around the trade-sustainability nexus. We focus specifically on the conditionality behind the Generalized Scheme of Preferences (GSP). The EU GSP regime bears the "carrot" (reduced tariffs), the "stick" (preferential tariff withdrawals), and increasingly intrusive "monitoring" mechanisms. Drawing on the post-development literature, we problematize the discourses that fundamentally enframe the EU GSP conditionality regime: development through trade, performance of power, and epistemic violence. Empirically, we analyze these frames by looking at public-facing texts produced by policy elites in the EU as well as in Cambodia and the Philippines during the two most recent GSP reform cycles since 2014. We argue that the dominant discursive acts of policy elites in the EU and the two target countries congeal into a global presupposition that there is no alternative to the EU GSP regime, thereby effacing counterhegemonic perspectives and stripping emancipatory notions such as "dialogue" and "partnership" of their radical potential. This formulation demands a genuine commitment to researching with the very people the EU is intent on regulating, reforming, and rescuing to unsettle taken-for-granted views about EU trade sanctions... view less
Keywords
EU; foreign policy; economic relations; commerce; trade policy; sustainable development; economic sanction; Cambodia; Philippines; Southeast Asia
Classification
International Relations, International Politics, Foreign Affairs, Development Policy
European Politics
Free Keywords
Generalized Scheme of Preferences; conditionality; post-development
Document language
English
Publication Year
2022
Page/Pages
p. 68-78
Journal
Politics and Governance, 10 (2022) 1
Issue topic
Beyond Foreign Policy? EU Sanctions at the Intersection of Development, Trade, and CFSP
ISSN
2183-2463
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed