TY - JOUR
T1 - The EU Accession Process, Chinese Finance and Rising Corruption in Western Balkan Stabilitocracies
T2 - Serbia and Montenegro
AU - Soyaltin Colella, Digdem
PY - 2022/9/21
Y1 - 2022/9/21
N2 - As front runners in the EU accession process, Serbia and Montenegro have failed to control corruption yet managed to advance along the path to EU integration. Although they have stronger state capacity compared to other Western Balkan countries, the two have recently reverted to previous poor governance practices after initial headway meeting EU good governance conditions. An in-depth analysis of the two countries explains this paradox as the result of the combination of the EU accession process and increasing Chinese finance. While the EU’s stability-oriented strategy helped to consolidate these authoritarian regimes, Chinese funding policies have further strengthened patronage networks, fuelling corruption in the EU’s ‘stabilitocracies’.
AB - As front runners in the EU accession process, Serbia and Montenegro have failed to control corruption yet managed to advance along the path to EU integration. Although they have stronger state capacity compared to other Western Balkan countries, the two have recently reverted to previous poor governance practices after initial headway meeting EU good governance conditions. An in-depth analysis of the two countries explains this paradox as the result of the combination of the EU accession process and increasing Chinese finance. While the EU’s stability-oriented strategy helped to consolidate these authoritarian regimes, Chinese funding policies have further strengthened patronage networks, fuelling corruption in the EU’s ‘stabilitocracies’.
U2 - 10.1080/09668136.2022.2115013
DO - 10.1080/09668136.2022.2115013
M3 - Article
JO - Europe-Asia Studies
JF - Europe-Asia Studies
SN - 0966-8136
ER -