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Institution

Swedish National Defence College

EducationStockholm, Sweden
About: Swedish National Defence College is a education organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Crisis management & European union. The organization has 218 authors who have published 569 publications receiving 8074 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate why self-representations of weakness pervade public discourse in self-identified great powers, and why they intersect with selfrepresentation of greatness.
Abstract: Why do self-representations of weakness pervade public discourse in self-identified great powers? Moreover, why do they intersect with self-representations of greatness? Do such narrative instabili ...

19 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the reader to a new form of global threat scenario and the possibilities of response and deterrence within their wider legal and political context, which is referred to as Hybrid Threats faced by NATO and its non-military partners.
Abstract: The end of the so-called "Cold War" has seen a change in the nature of present threats and with it to the overall role and mission of NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact in 1991 also removed the original raison d’etre of the Alliance: the prospect of having to repel a Soviet led attack by the Warsaw Pact on the West.Multimodal, low intensity, kinetic as well as non-kinetic threats to international peace and security including cyber war, low intensity asymmetric conflict scenarios, global terrorism, piracy, transnational organized crime, demographic challenges, resources security, retrenchment from globalization and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction were identified by NATO as so called "Hybrid Threats" (cf BI-SC Input for a New NATO Capstone Concept for The Military Contribution to Countering Hybrid Enclosure 1 to 1500/CPPCAM/FCR/10-270038 and 5000 FXX/0100/TT-0651/SER: NU0040, dated 25 August 2010). Having identified this kind of emerging threat, NATO is working on a comprehensive conceptual framework, (the Capstone Concept) which provides the framework for identifying and discussing such threats and possible multi-stakeholder responses. In essence, Hybrid Threats faced by NATO and its non-military partners require a comprehensive approach allowing a wide spectrum of responses, kinetic and non-kinetic by military and non-military actors (see "Updated List of Tasks for the Implementation of the Comprehensive Approach Action Plan and the Lisbon Summit Decisions on the Comprehensive Approach," dated 4 March 2011, p 1-10, paragraph 1).This short article introduces the reader to a new form of global threat scenario and the possibilities of response and deterrence within their wider legal and political context.

19 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that there are other ways of handling the kind of political problem observed by Schmitt than what he and his followers are offering, and that attempts to apply Schmitt's concept of "the exception" seldom are persuasive and sometimes even contradictory to Schmitts theory.
Abstract: This article is about the politics of ‘the exception’ and the role of ‘exceptionalism’ in contemporary international theory. The concept of ‘the exception’ was coined by Carl Schmitt and has in recent years become an inspiration for international relations theorists and foreign policy analysts, especially when engaging with issues such as great power politics, humanitarian intervention and the war against terrorism. It is concluded that attempts to apply Schmitt’s concept of ‘the exception’ seldom are persuasive and sometimes even contradictory to Schmitt’s theory. When dealt with out of context, ‘the exception’ becomes just an expression about something else. It is shown that there are other ways of handling the kind of political problem observed by Schmitt than what he and his followers are offering.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors address why the US in its military operations tends to focus on only one dimension in war -the military narrowly understood, and explain why this is the case.
Abstract: This article addresses why the US in its military operations tends to focus on only one dimension in war – the military narrowly understood. More precisely, in the US case, its armed forces tend to...

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argue that the soft power of the politics of harmony is coercive and has legitimized and enabled oppressive, homogenizing and bellicose expansionism and rule in the West and Japan, and that a similarly structured exercise of soft power may enable violence in and beyond China, too.
Abstract: This article engages with China’s “politics of harmony” to investigate the dangers and possibilities of soft power as a concept and practice. Chinese sources claim that China will be able to exercise soft power due to its tradition of thinking about harmony. Indeed, the concept of harmony looms large in Chinese soft power campaigns, which differentiate China’s own harmonious soft power from the allegedly disharmonious hard power of other great powers—in particular Western powers and Japan. Yet, similarly dichotomizing harmony discourses have been employed precisely in the West and Japan. In all three cases, such harmony discourses set a rhetorical trap, forcing audiences to empathize and identify with the “harmonious” self or risk being violently “harmonized.” There is no doubt that the soft power of harmony is coercive. More importantly, the present article argues that it has legitimized and enabled oppressive, homogenizing and bellicose expansionism and rule in the West and Japan. A similarly structured exercise of soft power may enable violence in and beyond China, too. Ultimately, however, we argue that China’s own tradition of thinking about harmony may help us to theorize how soft power might be exercised be in less antagonistic and violent ways.

18 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20234
202218
202165
202051
201935
201840