Prof. Dr. S. Neil MacFarlane
Beiträge als Autor:
- 31st IPA Vienna Seminar (aus der Publikation Promoting Institutional Responses to the Challenges in the Caucasus)
- Visions of the Caucasus (aus der Publikation Security Sector Governance in Southern Caucasus - Challenges and Visions)
Lebenslauf
Director of the New Issues in Security course at the GCSP,
Lester B. Pearson Professor of International Relations at the University of Oxford,
Professorial Fellow at St. Anne's College, and
Director of Oxford's Centre for International Studies.
He is a graduate of Dartmouth College and received his doctorate in international relations from Oxford in 1982.
Prior to taking up his current position, he was associate professor of government and director of the Center for Russian and East European Studies at the University of Virginia and professor of political studies and director of the Centre for International Relations at Queen's University, Canada.
He has held research posts at the IISS in London, Harvard University, the University of British Columbia, and Berkeley.
His current research focuses on the evolution of international relations in the Eurasian region and the role of international organisations therein, on conflict and conflict prevention in the newly independent states, and the relationship between politics, peace-keeping, and humanitarian action.
Lester B. Pearson Professor of International Relations at the University of Oxford,
Professorial Fellow at St. Anne's College, and
Director of Oxford's Centre for International Studies.
He is a graduate of Dartmouth College and received his doctorate in international relations from Oxford in 1982.
Prior to taking up his current position, he was associate professor of government and director of the Center for Russian and East European Studies at the University of Virginia and professor of political studies and director of the Centre for International Relations at Queen's University, Canada.
He has held research posts at the IISS in London, Harvard University, the University of British Columbia, and Berkeley.
His current research focuses on the evolution of international relations in the Eurasian region and the role of international organisations therein, on conflict and conflict prevention in the newly independent states, and the relationship between politics, peace-keeping, and humanitarian action.