"The book is thoughtfully organised, well-written and provides relevant material on an important aspect of supranationalism and adaption to international organisations—which is studied almost under in vitro conditions. In addition to the authors’ plea for further research on the stance of CEECs vis-à-vis the issue of policy coherence, it would also be important to expand the geographic scope by including cases such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania—countries which were not able to build on previously established frames of development cooperation—and to relate the findings to other studies on (post-accession) Europeanisation in light of the EU’s post-Brexit crisis as a global actor."STEFAN GÄNZLE, University of Agder, Europe-Asia Studies