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The subject of the article is the process of implementing the provisions of the Lisbon Treaty from 13 December 2007 during the first 5 years following its entry into force. The first part of the article introduces implementation actions concerning the EU’s institutional system while the second part – works on the implementation of provisions concerning the delegated and implementing acts. The third part has been devoted to the implementation of provisions modifying the principles of democracy and the axiology of the EU, however the fourth part concerns changes in the European Union’s common security and defence policy. Finally, the fifth part describes the Irish Protocol containing legal guarantees granted to Ireland by the EU within the domain of the right to life, education and family, tax policy and the security and defence policy.
EN
The aim of this paper is to present some praxiological remarks on the so-called Common Security and Defence Policy (earlier: The European Security and Defence Policy) of the European Union in the light of such terms as ‘hybrid warfare’, ‘networks’, ‘swarming’. The paper emphasizes the problem of consolidated hybrid security and defense.
EN
The subject of the article is the debate on the new external security strategy, which has been ongoing in the European Union since 2012. It presents the position of the European Council and the Council for Foreign Affairs, the European Commission, the European Parliament as well as the Interparliamentary Conference for a Common Foreign and Security Policy and Common Security and Defence Policy. In so far as these first two institutions play a decisive role in shaping a common security and defence policy, the influence of the next two is still limited, in spite of the fact that it has increased since the coming into force of the Lisbon Treaty of 13 December 2007. In turn, the Interparliamentary Conference, whose members include representatives of the European Parliament and national parliaments, functions only as an advisory body in this area.
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