Jan Lepeu
@janlpe.bsky.social
Sanctions & 🇪🇺 foreign policy. PhD researcher at the EUI & lecturer at Syracuse University Florence. Alumnus UNIGE, LSE, College of Europe. 🇨🇭&🇫🇷
This is the crowing achievement of almost 5 years of research on history of EU sanctions under the supervision of Jeff Checkel and @stephofmann.bsky.social. A massive thank you as well to the two other jury members @drclaraportela.bsky.social and Niklas Bremberg.
September 19, 2025 at 1:12 PM
This is the crowing achievement of almost 5 years of research on history of EU sanctions under the supervision of Jeff Checkel and @stephofmann.bsky.social. A massive thank you as well to the two other jury members @drclaraportela.bsky.social and Niklas Bremberg.
The first part of the discussion revisits some of the arguments made in my recently published article.
@eui-sps.bsky.social
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
@eui-sps.bsky.social
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Ukraine, the de-targetization of EU sanctions, and the rise of the European commission as architect of EU foreign policy - International Politics
The February 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine constituted a shock to the European Security ecosystem, catapulting it into a new geopolitical era and potentially redistributing the cards of who, how...
link.springer.com
May 12, 2025 at 4:36 PM
The first part of the discussion revisits some of the arguments made in my recently published article.
@eui-sps.bsky.social
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
@eui-sps.bsky.social
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Big thank you to @stephofmann.bsky.social for organising the Forum, as well as to the editors of International Politics and the two very helpful anonymous reviewers.
Keep an eye out for the Forum, lots of very interesting contributions in there on the futur of European Security 👀
Keep an eye out for the Forum, lots of very interesting contributions in there on the futur of European Security 👀
January 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Big thank you to @stephofmann.bsky.social for organising the Forum, as well as to the editors of International Politics and the two very helpful anonymous reviewers.
Keep an eye out for the Forum, lots of very interesting contributions in there on the futur of European Security 👀
Keep an eye out for the Forum, lots of very interesting contributions in there on the futur of European Security 👀
It's all very 'inside baseball' on how 🇪🇺 foreign policy is done. But ultimately it's about power, about who gets to organise Europe's foreign and security policy and to what aim.
www.politico.eu/article/eu-g...
www.politico.eu/article/eu-g...
EU capitals fume at ‘Queen’ von der Leyen
Diplomats accuse European Commission president of overreach amid a furor over her trip to Israel.
www.politico.eu
January 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
It's all very 'inside baseball' on how 🇪🇺 foreign policy is done. But ultimately it's about power, about who gets to organise Europe's foreign and security policy and to what aim.
www.politico.eu/article/eu-g...
www.politico.eu/article/eu-g...
Big Q moving forward is wether it was :
(i) an exceptional reaction to an exceptional challenge
(ii) the latest iteration of a double trend of the de-targetization of EU sanctions and the increasing role of the Commission in EU foreign policy.
(i) an exceptional reaction to an exceptional challenge
(ii) the latest iteration of a double trend of the de-targetization of EU sanctions and the increasing role of the Commission in EU foreign policy.
January 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Big Q moving forward is wether it was :
(i) an exceptional reaction to an exceptional challenge
(ii) the latest iteration of a double trend of the de-targetization of EU sanctions and the increasing role of the Commission in EU foreign policy.
(i) an exceptional reaction to an exceptional challenge
(ii) the latest iteration of a double trend of the de-targetization of EU sanctions and the increasing role of the Commission in EU foreign policy.
Or more bluntly put: the post Feb2022 de-targetization of EU's 🇷🇺 sanctions empowered the European Commission and its presidency, at the expense of the EEAS, the Council, and thus the Member States. Quite the departure from both existing practices and the spirit of the 🇪🇺Treaties.
January 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Or more bluntly put: the post Feb2022 de-targetization of EU's 🇷🇺 sanctions empowered the European Commission and its presidency, at the expense of the EEAS, the Council, and thus the Member States. Quite the departure from both existing practices and the spirit of the 🇪🇺Treaties.
The gist of my argument is that the 🇪🇺 turned this time to much more comprehensive forms of sanctioning (vs the very targeted sanctions we see in most EU sanctions regimes), and in doing so it changed the 🇪🇺sanctions-making processes, and crucially who's in control.
January 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
The gist of my argument is that the 🇪🇺 turned this time to much more comprehensive forms of sanctioning (vs the very targeted sanctions we see in most EU sanctions regimes), and in doing so it changed the 🇪🇺sanctions-making processes, and crucially who's in control.
The Forum investigates how the full-scale invasion of Ukraine changed the 'who', 'what' and 'in what way' of the European security architecture. My contribution looks more specifically at how the invasion of 🇺🇦 affected sanctions-making processes inside the 🇪🇺.
January 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
The Forum investigates how the full-scale invasion of Ukraine changed the 'who', 'what' and 'in what way' of the European security architecture. My contribution looks more specifically at how the invasion of 🇺🇦 affected sanctions-making processes inside the 🇪🇺.
Thanks, would love to be included
December 13, 2024 at 11:31 PM
Thanks, would love to be included
One of the reason we spend little on defense compare to the rest of the world is that whereas US/RUS/CHN defense spending is spent in the country (and partly on blue collar jobs), European 💶 often goes abroad.
Thus, most EU Defence spending is targeted towards collaborative projects across MS.
Thus, most EU Defence spending is targeted towards collaborative projects across MS.
December 10, 2024 at 4:41 PM
One of the reason we spend little on defense compare to the rest of the world is that whereas US/RUS/CHN defense spending is spent in the country (and partly on blue collar jobs), European 💶 often goes abroad.
Thus, most EU Defence spending is targeted towards collaborative projects across MS.
Thus, most EU Defence spending is targeted towards collaborative projects across MS.
I think an important argument for EU spending on defense a bit overlooked here is: consolidate and integrate the European Defense Industrial Base (DIB).
Rightly or wrongly, EU defense spending is thought to try to tackle the fragmentation and bad inventive structure of European defense spending.
Rightly or wrongly, EU defense spending is thought to try to tackle the fragmentation and bad inventive structure of European defense spending.
December 10, 2024 at 4:41 PM
I think an important argument for EU spending on defense a bit overlooked here is: consolidate and integrate the European Defense Industrial Base (DIB).
Rightly or wrongly, EU defense spending is thought to try to tackle the fragmentation and bad inventive structure of European defense spending.
Rightly or wrongly, EU defense spending is thought to try to tackle the fragmentation and bad inventive structure of European defense spending.