TEPSA has coordinated a study requested by AFET Comittee of the European Parliament. It is authored by Dr. Frank Mattheis (lead author), a Research Fellow at the United Nations University Institute on Comparative Regional Integration Studies (UNU-CRIS), Belgium; Dr. Dimpho Deleglise, an Associate Research Fellow at the United Nations University Institute on Comparative Regional Integration Studies (UNU-CRIS), Belgium; and Dr. Ueli Staeger, a Research and Teaching Fellow at the University of Geneva, Switzerland & Associate Research Fellow at the United Nations University Institute on Comparative Regional Integration Studies (UNU-CRIS), Belgium. The study is entitled “African Union: The African political integration process and its impact on EU-AU relations in the field of foreign and security policy”.
The European Union (EU) has long paid significant diplomatic, financial and institutional attention to its relationship with the African Union (AU). Engagement between the two organisations has steadily risen in scope and complexity over recent years, reflecting the AU’s increasing role in African foreign and security policy matters. This study analyses the dynamics that shape African political integration as well as foreign and security cooperation, identifying areas of convergence and divergence in the various cooperation formats that link both unions. The EU remains the AU’s principal partner, notably in the domain of peace and security. However, the relationship has become more politicised, with differing perspectives on the war in Ukraine and the EU’s pursuit of flexible security arrangements in Africa. This study recommends that the EU adapt its funding arrangements, cooperation formats and multilateral engagement in its relationship with the AU to remain in tune with the pace and direction of political integration in Africa. In this effort, the European Parliament can add specific value through parliamentary diplomacy.