Tesis
Coalizões no subsistema da política do acordo de Associação Mercosul-União Europeia
Fecha
2021-03-01Registro en:
Autor
Grego, Letícia Bernardes de Mello
Institución
Resumen
The Mercosur - European Union Association Agreement was finalized in June 2019,
after approximately 20 years of negotiation. The member countries and other actors
had divergent interests and expressed their opposition or support to the agreement
under various arguments, while protectionism of the agricultural sector of the
European Union was the most prominent justification among the opponents. While
some actors stand out for how they emphasized their position, it is unclear which
coalitions are behind the forces that guided the negotiations and which actors took
part in them. The Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) offers the theoretical basis for
the study of coalitions, which is a way for individuals and organizations to join their
resources and knowledge in order to imprint their preferences in public policies. This
work had the objective of identifying the coalitions of the subsystem of the negotiations
of the Mercosur-European Union Association Agreement between 2010 and 2019, by
verifying the presence of the two minimum attributes of a coalition, according to Weible
et al. (2019): the presence of actors who constantly tried to influence the outcome of
the policy and shared policy-core beliefs. Process tracing was used to validate
hypotheses formulated about which main state actors shared policy-core beliefs. A
coalition between France, Ireland and Belgium was identified in advocacy of higher
protectionism of the EU agricultural from 2010 to 2019. These same states formed a
coalition that demanded stricter environmental protection policies from the signatories
as a condition of the Agreement in 2019. Brazil, Spain and Uruguay formed a coalition
in support of trade liberalization between the blocs, of which Paraguay has been a part
since 2015.