
     
Christopher Coker,
is a Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics, and
Adjunct Professor at the Staff College, Oslo. He is the author of The Future
of War: the re-enchantment of war in the Twenty-First Century (2004), and
other books including
-
Waging War without Warriors
(2002)
- Humane Warfare (2001)
- War and the Illiberal
Conscience (1998)
- The Twilight of the West
(1997)
- War and the Twentieth
Century (1994)
- Britain's Defence Policy in
the 1990s (1992)
- A Nation in Retreat
(1991)
- Reflections on American
Foreign Policy (1989)
- Many publications on South
Africa and African security
"Globalisation and Insecurity in the Twenty-first Century" was published in
2002 as an Adelphi Paper for the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS).
"Empires in Conflict: the growing rift between Europe and the United States" was
published as a Whitehall Paper for the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI)
the following year.
His work and affiliations have included:
- NATO Fellow in 1981
- Two terms on the Council of the Royal United Services Institute
- Washington Strategy Seminar
- Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis (Cambridge, Mass)
- Black Sea University Foundation
- Moscow School of Politics
- LSE Cold War Studies Centre
- Council on the 21st Century Trust.
- Visiting Fellow of Goodenough College (2003-4)
- Associate Fellow of the Institute for the Study of the Americas (US
Programme)
- President of the Centre for Media and Communications of a Democratic
Romania.
He is a former editor of The Atlantic Quarterly and The European
Security Analyst. He is on the Editorial Board of Millennium and
The Journal of Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions.
He has advised several Conservative Party think tanks including the Institute
for European Defence and Strategic Studies and the Centre for Policy Studies and
helped to draw up the Party's defence platform in the 1996 European
Parliamentary Elections.
He has written for The Wall Street Journal; The Wall St Journal (Europe);
The Times; The Independent; The European, The Spectator, The Times Literary
Supplement and The Literary Review.
He is a regular lecturer at
- the Royal College of Defence Studies (London)
- the NATO Defence College (Rome)
- the Centre for International Security (Geneva)
- the National Institute for Defence Studies (Tokyo)
He has spoken at other military institutes in Western Europe, North America,
Australia and South-east Asia.
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