Publikasjoner
The Protection of Civilians in Peacekeeping in Africa: Context and Evolution
Gender-Sensitive Protection and the Responsibility to Prevent: Lessons from Chad
A Neighbourless Empire? The Forgotten Diplomatic Tradition of Imperial China
In the diplomatic canon, where the field has been demarcated by a central distinction drawn between suzerain and parity-based state relations, Imperial China has squarely been designated to the former category, and thereby as inherently alien to the diplomatic tradition. However, this image of a monolithic 2000-year-long rigid, hierarchical system betrays a too shallow assessment of Chinese history, and fails to acknowledge a noteworthy strain of parity-based relations running through Imperial Chinese foreign policy. This strain was at its most pronounced during the four centuries of the Song Dynasty, where China’s relations with a set of important neighbouring states were handled on egalitarian terms that were far more reminiscent of a full-fledged diplomatic multi-state system than what is popularly acknowledged. Based on a case study of the diplomatic relations of the Song Dynasty, this article argues that Imperial Chinese foreign policy on a set of occasions showed itself to adhere to principles immanent to classical diplomacy, and that these eras thus should naturally, and beneficially, belong to the historical canon of diplomacy.
Patriotic Left-Centrism: The Zigzags of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation
Party Organization in Transitional Parliaments: The Case of the Russian State Duma