Is the European Union failing the Mediterranean? Taking stock of the Pact for the Mediterranean

Irene Weipert-Fenner co-organizes ECPR Roundtable on the EU's Pact for the Mediterranean

The new Pact for the Mediterranean was signed in October 2025 and provides a strategic frame­work to strengthen cooperation with Southern Mediterranean neighbors and to build a Common Mediterranean Space. 30 years after the Barcelona Declaration, the Pact builds around three pillars (people; sustain­able and integrated economies; and security, prepared­ness and migration management). However, also given the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran and the subsequent massive escalation of violence in the region, is it suited for the (geo-)political challenges ahead?

The round­table seeks to explore the potential and limitations of the Pact along the three pillars. First regarding international relations and security, how can the Pact compensate for the negative externalities created over the years through transactional politics such as migration diplomacy, while presenting a real alternative to Russia and China's geo­political competition and the pre­datory practices by the Trump administration? How credible is this initiative in the absence of EU's willing­ness to resolve conflicts in Gaza, the Western Sahara or in Lebanon? Secondly, are economic relations really changing towards mutual benefit? Does the pact reflect upon the criticism of civil society activists on for instance energy partner­ships that are criticized for serving Europe’s interests first and fore­most? And thirdly, focusing on transnational relations, how can the EU reconnect with parts of the Southern Mediterranean civil society organizations which reject the EU’s support of authoritarian regimes and its passive­ness in the Israel-Gaza war?

By debating these questions, this online round­table seeks to understand whether the EU is failing the Mediterranean or whether the Pact is a serious remedy that could help improve the EU’s position vis a vis its Southern neighbors, both states and civil society, and in the global geo­political competition.

Chair: Sarah Wolff, Leiden University

Co-organizers: Clara-Auguste Süß (German Institute for Global and Area Studies), Irene Weipert-Fenner (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt)

Speakers: Mark Furness (German Institute of Development and Sustainability), Rim Filali Meknassi (European Institute of the Mediterranean), Richard Youngs (Carnegie Europe)

When? 21.04.2026, 16:00-17:30 CEST

Where? Online

Registration on the ECPR website.