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This comparative analysis concludes the InvigoratEU WP4 deliverable by synthesising findings from the accession trio - Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine - through the lens of Task 4.1's conceptual framework. Task 4.1 operationalises democratisation as a multi-level interplay of international (e.g., EU conditionality), regional (e.g., Russian hybrid threats), state (e.g., institutional reforms), and societal (e.g., civil society agency) factors, specifically tailored to conflict and post-conflict environments. This approach moves beyond traditional models focused on peaceful transitions, revealing how geopolitical pressures in the Eastern Neighbourhood generate distinctive patterns of democratic resilience. By extracting three novel democratisation models - securitised hollowing (Georgia), hybrid consolidation (Moldova), and wartime hybridisation (Ukraine) - the analysis delivers Objective 4.1 (O4.1): innovative perspectives on democratisation processes amid blockages to democracy, stability, and resilience. Building on InvigoratEU's innovative democratization models and synthesizing case-specific insights from Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine, these recommendations operationalize Task 4.1 for EU policymakers. They address blockages in conflict/post-conflict contexts across the accession trio, prioritizing adaptive resilience while balancing securitization's benefits with pluralism safeguards. Explicit linkages to the three models ensure targeted application, incorporating empirical lessons like Georgia's civil society crackdowns, Moldova's energy diversification, and Ukraine's wartime volunteer audits. 1. The EU should scale targeted funding for civil society as a democratic bulwark, allocating €100M+ annually through flexible instruments like the EED - directly countering securitised hollowing by strengthening the societal counterbalance mechanism, which theoretically activates when state actors exploit securitisation discourse for executive overreach under hybrid pressures. This funding operationalises the model's non-state resilience vector by sustaining horizontal mobilisation (protests, media ecosystems) that maintains pro-EU majorities (>70 percent) despite institutional erosion, as the pathological dynamic of hollowing risks terminal autocratisation without such autonomous agency. This redirects 30-40 percent of NDICI/EPF budgets to youth-led NGOs, independent media, and watchdog networks, with rapid-grant mechanisms under 90 days for hybrid threat responses such as disinformation audits and legal aid for activists. Drawing from Georgia's case, where EED channels bypassed government funding freezes (€121M), the EU should prioritize independent media survival amid crackdowns; expand to Moldova's civil society energy campaigns and Ukraine's volunteer organizations auditing wartime aid. This funding should be tied to resilience benchmarks like protest turnout (target: 20 percent youth participation) and public trust polls (aim: 70 percent support for the EU), monitored via annual EED reports bypassing autocratic governments. This builds societal ownership, preventing full hollowing as evidenced by Georgia's 80 percent pro-EU sentiment. 2. The EU must implement conflict-sensitive conditionality by embedding resilience benchmarks in Reform/Growth Facilities and operationalising hybrid consolidation through equilibrium security-democracy coupling. Regional low-intensity pressures (frozen conflicts, coercion) are transformed via integrated frameworks that fuse hybrid defence with governance benchmarks, yielding multi-level synergies that incrementally professionalise state institutions while societal co-production avoids zero-sum securitisation traps, achieving steady democratic deepening. Traditional metrics falter in war zones, so 40 percent of funding gates on pluralism indicators (media freedom indices, civil society space scores) alongside hybrid resilience measures (cyber defense drills, energy diversification). The Union should develop an EU-wide "Resilience Matrix" for low-intensity contexts like Moldova's Transnistria (countering vote-buying, gas coercion) and high-intensity like Ukraine's wartime audits, with quarterly reviews incorporating local experts. The Ukraine Facility disbursements should be linked to volunteer network audits and post-war election roadmaps, enforcing Ukraine-specific benchmarks like judicial vetting and anti-corruption (e.g., NABU/SAPO independence). 3. To integrate hybrid threats effectively, the EU should expand EUPM models with mandatory pluralism audits, replicating Moldova's success - scaling hybrid consolidation tools while preventing securitised hollowing risks. The Union could deploy missions to Georgia for Abkhazia monitoring, scale Ukraine's assistance with civil society veto rights, and standardize "pluralism clauses" featuring six-month audits (Freedom House/V-Dem) to block media crackdowns. Allocate €200M EPF for trio-wide cyber/media resilience training co-designed with NGOs, incorporating Ukraine's counter-disinformation needs (e.g., telethon reforms) and Moldova's Rapid Alert System enhancements. Balance with Ukraine's martial law derogations by mandating post-war decompression (electoral restoration, minority rights per Rome Statute ratification). 4. Finally, the EU needs to sustain enlargement momentum through swift, credible negotiations as a geopolitical signal against spoilers. Prioritize first-cluster openings (fundamentals: rule of law) by Q2 2026, paired with "trio coordination" summits signaling irreversibility. Adopt unified frameworks via QMV pilots bypassing vetoes (e.g., Hungary), with public diplomacy highlighting 74% Ukraine/70% Moldova EU support. Incorporate Ukraine's security pacts (28 bilateral agreements tying aid to reforms) and Georgia's sanctions advocacy (e.g., Human Rights Regime activation). Scale civil society involvement in negotiations, as Ukraine's 292 public reps in 36 groups exemplify, ensuring post-war media pluralism roadmaps. Additional case-derived actions include: energy security for Moldova (diversification grants to counter Russian leverage); post-war judicial staffing for Ukraine (TAIEX/Twinning for 22-61% vacancies); EU-wide sanctions coherence for Georgia (extending Baltic/US Magnitsky to Union level).