The European Union (EU) can take credit for preparing central European countries for EU integration, but it "continues to be hesitant to invest in democracy and human rights under authoritarian rule and at critical stages of transition," argue the authors of a new PASOS policy brief,
Is the EU ready to put democracy assistance at the heart of European foreign policy?
"A values-based approach to human rights must be combined with flexibility and strong support to civil society at all stages of the democratisation process," argue Jeff Lovitt, Executive Director of the Policy Association for an Open Society (PASOS), and Vera Řiháčková, Research Fellow, EUROPEUM Institute for European Policy, Czech Republic. The Visegrad governments, they write, "should support flexible funding initiatives, including the European Foundation for Democracy through Partnership (EFDP), and opt for more flexible, less bureaucratic, and more hands-on European-level approaches to democracy assistance".
The brief's recommendations include the introduction of "substantive changes in the civil service culture" of the EU, and the reform of staff rules to replace the current situation where civil servants have to "choose between the competing goals of budget transparency and flexibility, especially in support to human rights activists working in conditions where strict confidentiality is required". The recommendations also call on the European Parliament to conduct a mid-term evaluation of the effectiveness and utility of the new European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights (EIDHR), with a focus on qualitative rather than purely financial evaluation.
As active new donors in international democracy assistance, the Visegrad Four countries have limited financial resources, but their fresh transition experience brings advantages over the practices of more established European democracies, according to a second PASOS policy brief,
New kids on the block
,
by Jeff Lovitt and Jacek Kucharzyk, Research Director of the Institute of Public Affairs, Poland.
Visegrad governments' democracy assistance budgets have more than doubled in recent years, and have a comparative advantage, argues the report, in assisting neighbouring countries in the European integration process. The Visegrad Four "should continue the peer pressure on target-country politicians for further democratisation, and in the western Balkans and Ukraine remain advocates of the respective countries' European aspirations," according to the report.
The authors argue that Visegrad governments and Visegrad non-governmental organisations should build sustainable partnerships with local actors in target countries of their democracy assistance, provide matching funds for grants from larger donors, including the EU, and consider setting up a Visegrad Democracy Fund to operate on national or regional level.
New kids on the block
includes a set of general recommendations for the Visegrad countries, and specific recommendations for Visegrad governments and Visegrad non-governmental organisations' practices in four target countries, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cuba, and Ukraine, the four target countries of the PASOS research project,
Evaluation of the Democracy Assistance Policies and Priorities of the Visegrad Countries
. This project involves the PASOS members:
EUROPEUM Institute for European Policy
, Czech Republic,
Center for Policy Studies at the Central European University
, Hungary,
Institute of Public Affairs
, Poland, and
Institute for Public Affairs
, Slovak Republic.
PASOS is a network of 36 independent think-tanks spanning 23 countries in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
The project is supported by the
International Visegrad Fund
and the
Open Society Institute Think-Tank Fund
.