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Regular version of the site

Professor Kimberly Martin and Counterfactuals in International Relations Research

On the 17th March 2015 in the European Club, a series of academic encounters organised by the Department of International Relations at the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs, Professor Kimberly Marten gave a talk asking, ‘Could NATO have avoided expansion?’

Kimberly Marten, Professor at Columbia University is a well known academic in international security and Deputy Director for Development at the Harriman Institute.

Professor Marten used the method of counterfactual analysis in her research which involves identifying key moments, potential divergences in a particular political process which crucially determine the outcome. The researcher musn’t interfere with the structural processes and using Ockham’s Razor (building a theory with the fewest possible assumptions), chooses the most natural and likely variations for how events could unfold.

Professor Marten’s conclusion is that NATO couldn’t avoid expanding. The process could have been slowed down if at several key points, different decisions had been made, but expansion would have happened nevertheless. The main factors which brought it about were 1) that already in 1992-93 both parties in Washington agreed on the question of expansion, 2) clever lobbying by the Polish diaspora in the US, and 3) uncertainty in Russian foreign policy in the early 1990s. 

By Dr. M.V. Bratersky, Professor in the Department of International Relations  

See also:

American Political Scientist Thomas Graham Speaks at HSE

On January 22, Thomas Graham, former Special Assistant to the President of the United States on Russian and Eurasian affairs (2004-2007), spoke to faculty and students of the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs about the fundamentally competitive nature of US-Russia relations and prospects for cooperation between the two countries.

Participants of Russian-Chinese Summer School on International Affairs Tackle Trade, International Institutions, and More

On Thursday, July 11, students and faculty of the International Russian-Chinese Summer School on International Affairs bid farewell with a festive awards ceremony and closing lecture by Professor Sergey Karaganov, Academic Supervisor and Dean of the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs.

We Do Not Draw a Divisive Line between Economics and International Relations

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Countries Coming Together and Standing against the Dictates of Investors

States are forming alliances to stand against the dictates of international capital and also to successfully attract this capital to their markets, argues the head of HSE’s Department of International Affairs, Maxim Bratersky, in his report 'Political Functions of Regional Trade Agreements'.

Global Business in Nizhny Novgorod

The HSE in Nizny Novgorod now offers an English language Master’s Programme in Global Business.