Researcher
Kristin Haugevik
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Summary
Kristin Haugevik is Research Professor and Research Director at NUPI. She holds a PhD in political science from the University of Oslo (2014). An International Relations scholar, Haugevik’s research at NUPI revolves around international diplomacy, inter-state cooperation and friendship with a geographical focus on the Euro-Atlantic region and the foreign policies of Britain and the Nordic states.
Recent academic publications:
- 2024: From the incoming editors: A leading International Relations journal with a Nordic touch. Cooperation and Conflict, 59 (2), pp. 131-134 (w/ Benjamin de Carvalho, Paul Beaumont & Øyvind Svendsen).
- 2024: Friendship in World Politics. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies. Oxford University Press.
- 2023: On Safer Ground? The emergence and evolution of ‘Global Britain’, International Affairs, 99 (6), pp. 2387–2404 (w/ Øyvind Svendsen).
- 2022: United clubs of Europe: Informal differentiation and the social ordering of intra-EU diplomacy. Cooperation and Conflict (Online First).
- 2021: Reputation Crisis Management and the State: Theorising Containment as Diplomatic Mode (w/Cecilie Basberg Neumann). European Journal of International Relations, 27 (3), 708-729.
- 2020: The Nordic Balance Revisited: Differentiation and the Foreign Policy Repertoires of the Nordic States (w/Ole Jacob Sending). Politics and Governance, 8 (4), 441-450.
- 2019: Kith, kin and inter-state relations: International politics as family life. In Haugevik, Kristin & Iver B. Neumann (Eds) Kinship in International Relations. Routledge.
- 2019: Kinship in International Relations: Introduction and framework. In Haugevik, Kristin & Iver B. Neumann (Eds) Kinship in International Relations. Routledge (w/ Iver B. Neumann & Jon Harald Sande Lie).
- 2018: Special Relationships in World Politics: Inter-State Friendship and Diplomacy After the Second World War (monograph). Routledge.
- 2018: Parental Child Abduction and the State: Identity, Diplomacy and the Duty of Care, The Hague Journal of Diplomacy, 13, 1-21.
- 2017: Diplomacy through the back door: Norway and the bilateral route to EU decision-making. Global Affairs, 3(3), 277-291.
- 2017: Autonomy or integration? Small-state responses to a changing European security landscape. Global Affairs, 3(3), 211-221 (w/Pernille Rieker).
Full publication list here.
Expertise
Education
2023 Professorial Competence, NUPI
2014 PhD, Political Science, University of Oslo
2005 MA, Political science, University of Oslo
Work Experience
2024 - Research Director, NUPI
2023 - Research Professor, NUPI
2023 - Editor, Cooperation and Conflict
2018-2022 Head, Global Order and Diplomacy, NUPI
2014-2024 Senior Research Fellow, NUPI
2012-2016 Editor, International Politics
2006-2014 Research Fellow, NUPI
2005 Research Assistant, NUPI
2005 Intern, The Royal Norwegian Embassy in Washington D.C.
Aktivitet
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Clear all filtersMiddelvei med fransk touche: Franske og britiske preferanser for EUs sikkerhets- og forsvarspolitikk
Denne artikkelen diskuterer betydningen av Frankrikes og Storbritannias preferanser i utviklingen av EUs felles sikkerhets- og forsvarspolitikk (ESDP). Mer spesifikt: I hvor stor grad gjenspeiler ESDPs institusjonelle utvikling henholdsvis franske og britiske preferanser for sikkerhets- og forsvarspolitikk? I hvilket omfang har de to landene bidratt finansielt og personellmessig til EUs første militære operasjoner?
Strategic Adaption or Identity Change? : An analysis of Britain's Approach to the ESDP 1998-2004
In this working paper, Kristin Marie Haugevik seeks to analyse the nature of the changes in Britain’s approach to the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) after 1998. Ever since the beginning of the European integration process in 1951, Britain’s approach to European security and defence cooperation has been characterized by anti-federalism and transatlanticism. Hence, it was unexpected when Tony Blair, together with Jacques Chirac, took the initiative to frame a common security and defence policy for the EU in Saint Malo in 1998. This paper discusses to what extent Britain’s new approach to the ESDP after 1998 can be explained as the result of a strategic adaptation, and to what extent it can be seen as a result of more profound changes in the British identity and security interests. These two accounts are tested by analysing Britain’s approach to some of the most important ESDP documents since 1998: the Saint Malo declaration, the Laeken declaration, the Nice Treaty, the European Security Strategy, and the Constitution Treaty