AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


The China Factor: Understanding Hungary's Foreign Policy Vetoes in the EU

Author

Term

4. semester

Publication year

2024

Submitted on

Pages

55

Abstract

Denne afhandling undersøger, hvorfor Ungarn har nedlagt veto mod EU’s fælles udenrigs- og sikkerhedspolitik (CFSP) vedrørende Kina. Baggrunden er en tiltagende euroskepsis og en illiberal kurs i Ungarn, som har svækket forholdet til EU, samtidig med at båndene til Kina er blevet styrket. Afhandlingen sammenligner forklaringer fra Realisme og Konstruktivisme for at vurdere, om vetoerne primært skyldes økonomisk egeninteresse eller ændrede normer og identitet som følge af den dybere kinesisk-ungarske relation. Med Causal Process Tracing og en kombination af kvalitative og kvantitative data (officielle udtalelser, økonomiske optegnelser og medierapporter) analyseres Ungarns adfærd, herunder vetoer mod kritiske EU-udtalelser om menneskerettigheder og restriktive love i Kina. Resultaterne peger på, at konstruktivistiske forklaringer er mest robuste: Ungarns normer har bevæget sig væk fra EU-standarder, og landets udenrigspolitiske identitet er blevet mere Kina-orienteret gennem socialiseringsprocesser, mens økonomiske hensyn—bl.a. ønsket om at diversificere afhængigheden fra EU og tiltrække kinesiske investeringer—supplerer denne udvikling. Afhandlingen konkluderer, at Ungarns vetoer over for EU’s Kina-politikker primært drives af ændrede normer og identitet, understøttet af økonomisk egeninteresse, og bidrager dermed til forståelsen af, hvordan globale magter påvirker mindre staters adfærd i multilaterale institutioner.

This thesis examines why Hungary has vetoed the European Union’s Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) positions on China. Set against growing Euroscepticism and an illiberal turn in Hungary that has strained EU–Hungary relations, the study explores how deepening ties with China relate to Hungary’s repeated vetoes of EU statements critical of China’s human rights record and restrictive laws. Drawing on Realist and Constructivist frameworks, it tests whether these actions are driven by economic self-interest or by changed norms and identity stemming from closer Sino-Hungarian relations. Using Causal Process Tracing and a mixed set of qualitative and quantitative sources—official statements, economic records, and media reports—the analysis finds stronger support for Constructivist explanations: Hungary’s norms have diverged from EU standards, and its foreign policy identity has shifted toward a China-centric orientation through socialization, while economic considerations—such as diversifying dependence away from the EU and maintaining favorable perceptions among Chinese investors—also matter. The thesis concludes that Hungary’s vetoes of EU CFSP positions on China are primarily motivated by altered norms and identity, supplemented by economic self-interest, offering broader insight into how global powers shape the foreign policies of smaller states within multilateral institutions.

[This summary has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project (PDF)]