Egmont Institute logo Royal Institute
for International Relations
  • Home
  • Events
  • Publications
  • Topics
  • Projects
  • Education & Training
  • Staff
  • About
  • Press
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Press
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Home
  • Events
  • Publications
  • Topics
  • Projects
  • Education & Training
  • Staff
  • About

Home > Publications

Publications

Commentaries

+details

The limits of international criminal justice: Lessons from the Ongwen case

By Valérie Arnould,

27 January 2015

The arrest of Lord’s Resistance Army commander Dominic Ongwen may provide a much needed boost to the International Criminal Court. But it also highlights the complex challenges faced by international […]

  • Central Africa,
  • Other African regions,

Commentaries

+details

Beware Grexit 2: In finance, as in movies, sequels get bloodier, faster

By Charles Secondat,

27 January 2015

During the last weeks, many observers have indicated that the Eurozone was now much stronger and could bear easily a Greek exit. This could reveal more about their calm and […]

  • EU economic affairs,
  • EU institutional affairs,

Commentaries

+details

Is Big Brother in trouble? Regionalisation of the Boko Haram crises challenges Nigeria’s leadership position

By Axel Klein, Jean-Christophe Hoste, Valérie Arnould,

23 January 2015

This commentary argues that Nigeria’s inability to tackle Boko Haram has prompted neighbouring countries to look for external assistance and challenge Nigeria’s claim to leadership in West Africa.

  • Other African regions

Commentaries

+details

The future of European Geostrategy

By Daniel Fiott,

23 January 2015

Daniel Fiott draws conclusions from the lecture series on the future of European geostrategy, which Egmont and the Institute for European Studies of the VUB organized last fall. All 10 […]

  • EU strategy and foreign policy,
  • European defence / NATO,

Commentaries

+details

The Belgian army: soon to be a gendarmerie?

By Sven Biscop,

22 January 2015

Soldiers in the street are not the answer to terrorism, but if Belgium does not invest more in defence, that may be all its armed forces remain capable of.

  • Terrorism

Studia Diplomatica

+details

Vol. LXVI, Issue 4 (2013)

By Marc Franco, Tanguy Struye de Swielande,

20 January 2015

Articles Time to go home? The EU’s legacy and future options in Afghanistan by Edward Burke Identity as a framework for alternative regionalism? An examination of the organisation of Islamic […]

  • EU and strategic partners,
  • EU economic affairs,
  • EU strategy and foreign policy,
  • Middle-East / North Africa,
  • <
  • 107
  • 108
  • 109
  • 110
  • 111
  • >

Categories

  • Africa Policy Briefs
  • Books
  • Commentaries
  • Egmont papers
  • European Policy Briefs
  • Other publications
  • Security Policy Briefs
  • Studia Diplomatica
  • Studia Diplomatica Historical Articles

Subscribe

Egmont

Royal Institute for International Relations
Rue des Petits Carmes 24A
1000 Brussels - BELGIUM

Postal Address

Rue des Petits Carmes 15
1000 Brussels - BELGIUM

Contact

+32 (0) 2 223 41 14

info@egmontinstitute.be

Follow us

© EGMONT 2017 - All rights reserved -

  • Home -
  • ‘De soldaat en de welvaartstaat: een pandemie leidt dus niet meteen tot de wereldvrede’ -
  • Home