article
Regional Integration and Security: A Comparative Perspective of the European Union and North America
Registro en:
1870-3550
N_2006_0001_0001_0095
CONACYT
2448-7228
Autor
Chanona, Alejandro
Institución
Resumen
The attacks of September 11, 2001 in Washington (9/11), March 11, 2004 in Madrid (11-M) and July 7 and 21 in London (7-J and 21-J) have turned security into the central issue on international and regional agendas in North America and Europe, now spreading to other regions of the world. As a result of the terrorist attacks, security has developed into an important element of integration by becoming a catalyst for agreements oriented to building security communities. The most complete representation of the construction of a North American bloc can be seen in smart border agreements and in the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America. Undoubtedly, the security component of North America as a region is increasing and the framework for trilateral convergence exists. In the EU case, the concern about safety was clearly the main basis of accords with a view to the approval of, the European Constitution, and it will also strengthen the integration process. Today, consolidating the EU is a matter of security so Europe is securitizing its agenda.