ECIPE Webinar: Lessons from the Eastern Partnership – Views from EaP Countries
What's next for the Eastern Partnership?
The Eastern Partnership initiative was launched in 2009. The period since then has been dramatic. Ukraine has been invaded. Armenia and Azerbaijan, two EaP countries, have fought a war against each other. For some countries, the bilateral track of the Eastern Partnership has resulted in EU accession status and negotiations. For Belarus, it is further away from cooperation with the EU now than in the EaP inception.
Europe’s relations with its Eastern neighbourhood countries remain crucial. Hopefully, the next 15 years won’t feature new wars, but the region will continue to develop. Geopolitical forces of change will remain strong – possibly exacerbated by changing dynamics in and between China, Russia, Turkey, and the United States. Economies will change too. And it all begs the questions: what has been learned from 15 years of the Eastern Partnership that can help guide the EU as it ponders what policies should come next?
Programme
Speakers:
Dr. Stepan Grigoryan, Chairman of the Board, Analytical Centre on Globalization and Regional Cooperation (ACGRC), Armenia
Dr. Yauheni Preiherman, Founder and Director, Minsk Dialogue Council on International Relations, Belarus
Kakha Gogolashvili, Director of EU Studies, Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies (GFSIS), Georgia
Mihai Mogildea, Deputy Director, Institute for European Policies and Reforms, Moldova
Svitlana Kovalchuk, Executive Director, Yalta European Strategy (YES), Ukraine
Opening remarks by:
Fredrik Erixon, Director, ECIPE
Moderator:
Tengiz Pkhaladze, Senior Fellow, ECIPE