Foreign policy
DIIS researches the relation between states, international relations and cooperation. The focus is on the differences between the foreign policies of small states and superpowers, how politicians are guided by the foreign policies of the past, and the EU's foreign policy and diplomacy in international organisations.
Research and activites
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DIIS Working Paper2022A historical and critical analysisElena Paola Carola Alessiato
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Chapter2022Andreas Bøje Forsby
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Photo/illustration by Kai Stachowiak copyright licenseJournal Article2022a European strategic vacuumTobias Liebetrau
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DIIS Working Paper2022Analytically vacuous, politically usefulMaria-Louise Clausen & Peter Albrecht
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Photo/illustration by VOA via Wiki CommonsJournal Article2022How China’s identity constrains its ability to wield soft powerAndreas Bøje Forsby
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DIIS Working Paper2022The resilient state of LebanonLars Erslev Andersen
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DIIS Report2022Esbern Friis-Hansen, Lily Salloum Lindegaard, Marie Ladekjær Gravesen, Mikkel Funder & Lasse Pinderup
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Journal Article2022Supporting Baltic independence 1990-1991Mikkel Runge Olesen
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Photo/illustration by Lennart Larsen via Wiki Commons copyright licenseJournal Article2022The possibility for collective action against China’s economic coercion seems more likely than ever.Luke Patey
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Report2022From differentiation to alignmentKristin Haugevik, Øyvind Svendsen, Katja Creutz , Mikkel Runge Olesen, Anna Lundborg Regnér & Jakob Linnet Schmidt
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Book Chapter2022Thinking Migration, Sexuality, and Precarity in a Neoliberal AgeSine Plambech, Mark Padilla, Sealing Cheng & Svati Shah
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Chapter2021essentially contestedChristine Nissen
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Journal Article2021Ida Marie Savio Vammen, Signe Marie Cold-Ravnkilde & Hans Lucht
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Photo/illustration by Guillaume Baviere/Flickr.com copyright licenseReport2021Katja Creutz , Sofie Berglund, Telli Betül Karacan, Alberto Giacometti, Kristin Haugevik, Ninna Nyberg Sørensen, Mari Wøien Meijer & Axa Lares
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Journal Article2021motives and consequencesMartin Lemberg-Pedersen, Zachary Whyte & Ahlam Chemlali
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DIIS Report2021a comparative study of changing threat perceptions in the Baltic Sea regionAndreas Bøje Forsby
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Photo/illustration by Mahdieh Gaforian/Fars Media Corporation via Wikimedia Commons copyright licenseJournal Article2021How the European New Right imagines a post-liberal world orderManni Crone
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Journal Article2021Travels of a contested civilizational imaginaryVibeke Schou Tjalve
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DIIS Report2021origins, progress and actorsYang Jiang
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DIIS Working Paper2021drivers, desires and developmentIda Marie Savio Vammen, Lars Engberg-Pedersen & Hans Lucht
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Book2021From neighbours to allies
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Book2021A framework for the study of unwanted futuresTrine Villumsen Berling, Ulrik Pram Gad, Karen Lund Petersen & Ole Wæver
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseJournal Article2021Exploring the role of national identity in sociotechnical imaginaries of energy securityTrine Villumsen Berling, Izabela Surwillo & Sandra Sørensen
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Photo/illustration by Hepburn Wind via Flickr.com copyright license
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Photo/illustration by Santi Palacios/AP/Ritzau ScanpixDIIS Policy Brief2021Gabriella Sanchez
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Photo/illustration by Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Ritzau Scanpix copyright licenseDIIS Longread2021Stories of waves of climate migrants miss the complexity that lies behind migration itselfLily Salloum Lindegaard
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Photo/illustration by Andrew Testa/Ate03040grn/Ritzau ScanpixDIIS Policy Brief2021No green future without ChinaPer Kalvig & Hans Lucht
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DIIS Policy Brief2021what can we learn from the Northern outlook?Christine Nissen & Jessica Larsen
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Photo/illustration by Russian Ministry of Defense copyright licenseDIIS Policy Brief2021what Russia wants in the ArcticFlemming Splidsboel Hansen
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Photo/illustration by Cecilie CastorDIIS Policy Brief2021forging a compromise between the US and Europe in NATOMikkel Runge Olesen
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DIIS Policy Brief2020When Denmark conducts foreign policy on behalf of Greenland … and vice versaSara Olsvig & Ulrik Pram Gad
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DIIS Comment2020Thabit Jacob
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DIIS Policy Brief2020Ways forward for Denmark’s Ministry of DefenceJessica Larsen & Mikkel Funder
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INTERVIEW2020Lis Kayser & Sara Mejlvang Møller
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DIIS Policy Brief2020Iranian foreign policy utilizes partnersMaria-Louise Clausen
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Policy Brief2020How will the US election impact the conflicts over defence spending within NATO?Mikkel Runge Olesen
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DIIS Policy Brief2020Small states can be players in great power competitionLuke Patey
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DIIS Policy Brief2020Not just US soldiers – NATO’s soul is also moving eastVibeke Schou Tjalve
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Policy Brief2020Short-term responses and long-term consequencesRichard Gowan & Louise Riis Andersen
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Policy Brief2020Global crisis management in a post-Covid19 worldRichard Gowan & Louise Riis Andersen
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2020The pandemic is a test of trust and confidence in the Putin presidencyFlemming Splidsboel Hansen
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Policy Brief2020Security and Defense Policy Implications for DenmarkCamilla Tenna Nørup Sørensen
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2020Together or Apart?Pia Hansson
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright license
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2020Abdirahman Edle Ali, Abdirahman Mustaf Mohamed, Jethro Norman, Karuti Kanyinga & Peter Albrecht
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2020Abdirahman Edle Ali, Ahmed Musa, Mohamed Aden Hassan, Nauja Kleist & Mark Bradbury
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Policy Brief2020Developing a European Indo-Pacific Strategy for a Changing Global OrderLuke Patey
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Policy Brief2020Action needed for peacekeeping in distressLouise Riis Andersen & Richard Gowan
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2020Poor immigrant neighbourhoods in New York are being hit the hardestSine Plambech