Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions
Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions
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Sten RynningSten Rynning is associate professor in the department of political science at the University of Southern Denmark. He is the author of Changing Military Doctrine: Presidents and Military Power in Fifth Republic France, 1958-2000 (Praeger, 2002) and NATO Renewed: The Power and Purpose of Transatlantic Cooperation (Palgrave, 2005), the co-editor of Missile Defence: International, Regional and National Implications (Routledge, 2005), and guest editor of the Nato special issue of the Journal of Transatlantic Studies (3/1, 2005) Recent articlesNato's Riga summit: next stop, big thinking The Riga summit reveals the Atlantic alliance to be split politically and therefore strategically. The solution is boldness, says Sten Rynning. |
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