From role change to policy change: EU member states and change in EU foreign policy after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine




Karjalainen, Tyyne; Siddi, Marco

PublisherTaylor and Francis Group

2025

Journal of European Integration / Revue d'Intégration Européenne

0703-6337

1477-2280

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/07036337.2025.2574424

https://doi.org/10.1080/07036337.2025.2574424

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/505056253



Russia’s war against Ukraine has led to a fundamental rethinking of EU foreign policy, including enlargement, security and defense, and energy policy. The nature and depth of the shift, as well as the agency driving it, remain largely unexplored. Drawing on role theory, this article examines the agency of member states in shaping the policy shift in a co-constitutive process of resolving role conflicts and adjusting roles. Based on original interview data and document analysis, it finds that role changes – such as abandoning opposition to enlargement, renouncing the energy partnership with Russia, and the military turn – remain contested and context-specific, limiting the policy outcomes. While the enlargement pledge appears irreversible, the role changes are not sufficient for enlargement to materialize. In EU security policy, role adjustments are even more limited but have already produced policy outcomes. Finally, in energy policy, decoupling has not been fully achieved, despite fundamental role changes.


This work was supported by the Finnish Cultural Foundation (Tyyne Karjalainen’s personal grant).


Last updated on 2025-03-11 at 12:00