Papers

The Refugee Crisis as a Global Humanitarian Challenge

The ongoing refugee crisis should not be understood as a specifically European problem. Rather, we should take care to separate the current crisis of mass displacement, from the ongoing internal crisis of the European project. The latter is linked to the refugee crisis, but does not originate from it. This distinction is important to make, […]

Papers

How the Refugee Crisis Will Reshape the EU

The arrival in Europe of more than 1 million asylum seekers in 2015 unsettled the EU like no crisis before it. The EU’s current institutional and legislative arrangements were clearly not up to dealing with the huge influx of migrants, and the crisis laid bare deep divisions among the member states. Depending on the extent […]

Papers

The Refugee Surge in Europe: Economic Challenges

The macroeconomic effect from the refugee surge is likely to be a modest increase in GDP growth, reflecting the fiscal expansion associated with support to the asylum seekers, as well as the expansion in labor supply as the newcomers begin to enter the labor force. The effect is concentrated in the main destination countries (Austria, […]

Papers

The Syrian Humanitarian Disaster: Disparities in Perceptions, Aspirations, and Behaviour in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey

Humanitarian assistance coupled with an unsustainable policy of regional containment have only created greater poverty and misery for Syrians fleeing civil war. How this has been allowed to happen on the southern shores of the Mediterranean – where extraordinary social linkages and networks have existed for centuries – lies mainly in the  disparities between perceptions, […]

Papers

Turkish Immigration Politics and the Syrian Refugee Crisis

Turkey’s policy making towards Syrian refugees has been characterized by a mix of unplanned pragmatism on the local and regional level, and calibrated legal and political steering by national policy makers. Much innovation has happened spontaneously in those areas with a large Syrian population; this process was helped by a flexible application of the law, […]

Papers

Youth Unemployment in the Mediterranean Region and its Long-Term Implications

Youth unemployment is an urgent issue in many countries across the Mediterranean region, where 25.4 million people are unemployed, of whom 7-8 million are aged 15-24.  490 million people live in the region, of which 192 million are part of the 8 EU member states. The proportion of young people not in education, employment or […]

Papers

The Rise of Unemployment in the Eurozone: The Worst of the Crisis is Not Over

The relentless rise in unemployment, particularly youth unemployment in the majority of the eurozone member countries over the last three years is one of the most dramatic consequences of the protracted crisis in the euro area. At this stage, a quarter of young Europeans have no job and face daunting prospects, to say the least, […]

Papers

Unlocking Fermale Employment Potential in Europe. Drivers and Benefits

With an aging population and declining productivity growth, Europe faces serious challenges to raising its output growth. Adding to these challenges are the various gender gaps in the labor market. Despite significant progress in recent decades, there are still fewer women than men participating in Europe’s labor market, and women are more likely to work […]

Papers

Energy Union and EU global strategy. The undefined link

The Energy Union strategy is the latest attempt to upgrade EU energy policy. The EU’s global energy and climate policies are going through a period of intense change, and this change has implications for the EU’s foreign and security policies. There is much fluid debate about how the EU should confront the emerging set of […]

Papers

Energy across the Mediterranean: A call for Realism

Political instability in the southern Mediterranean countries has highlighted the unsustainability of their economic models. Widespread economic discontent, and in particular very high youth unemployment,underpinned the Arab Spring uprisings. As the refugee crisis shows, this is also Europe’s problem and Euro-Mediterranean economic cooperation needs to be reviewed. Energy is a key part of the cooperation […]

Papers

Europe’s Energy Union: Foreign Policy Implications for Energy Security, Climate and Competitiveness

In February 2015 there was a significant development in plans for an EU-wide Energy Union, with the European Commission’s adoption of a ‘Framework Strategy for a Resilient Energy Union with a Forward-Looking Climate Change Policy’. The new strategy document outlines the Commission’s ambition to attain ‘secure, sustainable, competitive, affordable energy for every European’. The initiative […]

Papers

Advancing Renewable Energy in Resource-Rich Economies of the MENA

There are many reasons why major oil and gas producing economies of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) need to keep pace with the rest of the world and invest in renewable energy. Among these are rapidly growing domestic energy demand, growing uncertainty over long-term demand for hydrocarbon resources, the ensuing need for economic […]

Papers

Hydrocarbon Developments in the Eastern Mediterranean The Case for Pragmatism

The Eastern Mediterranean potentially holds substantial amounts of natural gas, some already discovered but with a lot more to come. Even though substantial quantities of this gas can be consumed within the region, mostly by Egypt, Israel, and Turkey, potential discoveries are such that eventually there will be exports to Europe and beyond. One question […]

Papers

Risky Routes: Energy Transit in the Middle East

Security of energy exports and energy transit from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, given its paramount importance to the global economy, has long been a concern. Even if worst-case scenarios have not materialized, the region has a long history of disruptions to oil and gas production and transport. Transit through the Gulf […]

Papers