This book is about security in a world undergoing rapid change. It examines how the shift of power away from the traditional American-European axis will affect security in the coming decades.
Exploring issues such as military intervention, cyber-security, and the protection of the global commons, it analyses the new parameters of security in the world as they relate to Western power and Western decline. In doing so, it brings together a very diverse group of authors, from both the West and East, and from the academic and practitioner worlds.
This book will be of key interest to students and scholars of international relations, U.S. and European Security, and transatlantic relations.
About the Author: Anne Marie LeGloannec, Sciences Po holds a Ph.D. from Sciences Po. Fellow SSRC-MacArthur Foundation, 1988-1990. Former fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington DC, 1984 and 2004. Former deputy director of the Marc Bloch Center in Berlin (1997-2002); has held teaching positions at Johns Hopkins University (Bologna Center), the University of Paris I, Sciences Po, Sciences Po Lille, the Free University of Berlin, and the Viadrina University (Frankfurt-an-der-Oder). Visiting professor at the University of Stuttgart (April-July 2007) and at the University of Cologne (2007-2008).
Manuel Muniz is a DPhil (PhD) student in International Relations at the University of Oxford. He holds a JD from the Complutense University in Madrid, an MSc in Finance from the IEB, and a Master in Public Administration from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government (HKS). His research falls within the field of strategic studies. In particular he is interested in issues related to European and EU defense, as well as transatlantic security more broadly. Manuel is currently a Fellow at Science Po's Centre d'Études de Relations Internationales (CERI) in Paris where he helps coordinate research on transatlantic security in "Transworld", an FP7 project financed by the European Commission.
David Cadier is a Fellow in International Strategy and Diplomacy at LSE IDEAS and a teaching fellow in the International Relations Department at the LSE. Dr Cadier earned his PhD in Political Sciences and European Studies from Sciences Po (Paris) in 2012.