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  1. Since the EU is tightening its bonds with the Eastern Partnership countries, the question arises how it engages with these de facto states. The EU’s interaction with the ‘unrecognised states’ in the Eastern Partnership is shaped by both international and EU law.

  2. 3 de dic. de 2018 · Inside the de facto states, there is understandable frustration that hundreds of thousands of people in Europe have effectively become second-class world citizens in many regards. They struggle to do things that citizens of recognized states take for granted: making bank transfers, traveling abroad with a recognized international ...

  3. 3 de dic. de 2018 · The real goals of the de facto states are probably more modest than their declared ambitions. Most aspire less to formal independence and more to self-government within an international framework. Cooperation with de facto authorities is controversial but inevitable.

  4. 18 de jul. de 2022 · Nearly 30 years of nation-building in the four enduring Eurasian de facto states provide guidance for studying processes at work in other such entities. The two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine, Donetsk and Luhansk, engage in similar processes, at least before the 2022 war.

  5. 6 de feb. de 2019 · 2019-02-06. 5 min read. Articles, Analysis. As of early 2019, policy-makers looking for pragmatic and forward-thinking approachesto meaningful engagement with de facto states in the EU’s neighbourhoodshould keep as their point of reference Thomas de Waal’s recently published book “

  6. 11 de dic. de 2018 · Carnegie Europe. For decades, three “de facto states”—Abkhazia, Transdniestria, and northern Cyprushave endured in Europe. They are unrecognized internationally but are relatively stable and unlikely to collapse. The conflicts associated with them remain unresolved.

  7. 23 de jul. de 2018 · Following on from this, James Ker-Lindsay explores the way in which de facto states are stigmatised within the international system and how this shapes the degree of interaction they enjoy with external actors. Given the strong opposition to secession by the international community, de facto states have often found themselves ostracised.