University of Florida Homepage

European Security: Beyond Guns and Soldiers

European Security: Beyond Guns and Soldiers

1-3 Credits (variable), Spring 2019

View the syllabus here

 

Instructors

Instructor

Prof. David J. Galbreath – University of Bath

Instructor of record

Prof. Zachary Selden – UF, Dept. of Political Science

 

Course Description

This course is designed to make students familiar with a range of security
issues confronting Europe and the transatlantic alliance.  In addition to
more traditional concerns, the course will focus on an expanded definition
of security as it applies to Europe and the wider region.  This will include
an examination of energy security, the role of information systems in
security, as well as migration, health and food security. Students may take
this course for variable credit.  For 1 credit, students are expected to do
the required reading and take a test at the end of the course.  For 2
credits, students take the same test and write a short 5 page literature
review. For 3 credits, students will take the test and write a 15-20 page
research paper. All students are expected to do all of the required reading
in advance and participate in class discussions.  This is a small seminar,
not a lecture course.  As such, it will be driven by class discussion of the
reading.  The course will meet ten times.  The first nine will be class
discussion sessions as listed below.  The last session will be the workshop
on Friday April 12 which will bring together academics and policy
professionals from Europe and the United States.  Students should be at all
ten meetings to receive credit for participation.  If you know that you will
not be able to attend one session, please let the instructor know in
advance.
 

Course Schedule

Day 1 – Monday, April 1 – Introduction: Traditional Concepts of Security

Topics: Realism, Liberalism, constructivism, gender theory
 
Readings:

  • Chapter 3 in Galbreath, David J., Jocelyn Mawdsley, and Laura Chappell,
    Forthcoming 2019. Contemporary European Security, Routledge:
    London.
  • Chapters 2, 3, in Biscop, Sven, and Richard G. Whitman, eds. 2013. The Routledge Handbook of European Security. London; New York: Routledge.
  • Jenichen, Anne, Jutta Joachim, and Andrea Schneiker. 2018. “‘Gendering’
    European Security: Policy Changes, Reform Coalitions and Opposition in
    the OSCE.” European Security 27(1): 1–19.

 

Day 2 – Tuesday, April 2 – European Security in the Post-WWII Era

Topics: Origins of NATO, nuclear deterrence
 
Readings:

  • James Blackwell, “In the Laps of the Gods: The Origins of NATO Forward
    Defense,” Parameters(1985).
  • Lawrence Kaplan, “The United States and the Origins of NATO
    1946-1949,” The Review of Politics, 31:2 (April 1969) 210-222.
  • Yost, David S. 2011. “The US Debate on NATO Nuclear Deterrence.” International Affairs
    87(6): 1401–38.
  • McNamara, Robert S. 1983. “The Military Role of Nuclear Weapons:
    Perceptions and Misperceptions: Foreign Affairs, Fall 1983.” Survival
    25(6): 261–71.

 

Day 3 – Wednesday, April 3 – European Security after the Fall of the
Berlin Wall

Topics: Evolution of NATO, the EU as an emerging security actor,
relations with Russia

 
Readings:

  • Kroenig, Matthew. 2015. “Facing Reality: Getting NATO Ready for a New
    Cold War.” Survival 57(1): 49–70.
  • Stefanova, Boyka. 2005. “The European Union as a Security Actor:
    Security Provision through Enlargement.” World Affairs 168(2):
    51–66.
  • Sperling, James, and Mark Webber. 2009. “NATO: From Kosovo to
    Kabul.” International Affairs 85: 491–511.
  • Kropatcheva, Elena. 2012. “Russia and the Role of the OSCE in European
    Security: A ‘Forum’ for Dialog or a ‘Battlefield’ of Interests?” European Security
    21(3): 370–94.

 

Day 4 – Thursday, April 4 – New Concepts of Security

Topics: Human security, broader definitions of security
 
Readings:

  • David Campbell, Writing Security(Minneapolis: University of
    Minnesota Press, 1992). 1-15
  • Smith, Steve. 1999. “The Increasing Insecurity of Security Studies:
    Conceptualizing Security in the Last Twenty Years.” Contemporary Security Policy
    20(3): 72–101.
  • Guerrina, Roberta, Laura Chappell, and Katharine A.M. Wright. 2018.
    “Transforming CSDP? Feminist Triangles and Gender Regimes: CSDP and
    Gender Regimes.” JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies 56(5):
    1036–52.
  • Martin, Mary, and Mary Kaldor, eds. 2009. Eu and Human Security : European External Interventions and
    Missions
    . [S.l.]: Routledge.

 

Day 5 – Friday, April 5 – European Defense and the Revolution in Military
Affairs

Topics: What is an RMA, the RMA in historical context, RMA in European
context

 
Readings:

  • Andrew Krepinevitch, “From Calvary to Computer: The Pattern of Military
    Revolutions,” The National Interest, Fall 1994.
  • Cohen, Eliot, ‘Change and Transformation in Military Affairs’, Journal of Strategic Studies, 27:3 (2004), pp. 395-407.
  • Galbreath, David J. 2015. “RMA, European Militaries, and the Limits of
    Modernization.” In Reassessing the Revolution in Military Affairs: Transformation,
    Evolution, and Lessons Learned
    , Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 156–74.
  • Galbreath, David J., and Simon J. Smith. 2016. “Military Capabilities
    and Force Transformation.” In The EU, Strategy and Security Policy: Regional and Strategic
    Challenges
    , London: Routledge, 186–201.

 

Day 6 – Monday, April 8 – European Issues in Energy Security

Topics: Energy as a security, EU-Russian relations
 
Readings:

  • Goldthau, Andreas, and Nick Sitter. 2015. “Soft Power with a Hard Edge:
    EU Policy Tools and Energy Security.” Review of International Political Economy
    22(5): 941–65.
  • Neuman, Marek. 2010. “EU–Russian Energy Relations after the 2004/2007 EU
    – Enlargement: An EU – Perspective.” Journal of Contemporary European Studies
    18(3): 341.
  • Kirchner, Emil, and Berk, Can. 2010. “European Energy Security
    Co-Operation: Between Amity and Enmity.” Journal of Common Market Studies
    48: 859–80.
  • Proedrou, Filippos. 2007. “The EU-Russia Energy Approach under the Prism
    of Interdependence.” European Security 16: 329–55.

 

Day 7 – Tuesday, April 9 – Europe and Cyber-Security

Topics: Cyber security and governance
 
Readings:

  • Cavaiola, Lawrence J., David C. Gompert, and Martin Libicki. 2015.
    “Cyber House Rules: On War, Retaliation and
    Escalation.” Survival57(1): 81–104.
  • Junio, Timothy J. 2013. “How Probable Is Cyber War? Bringing IR Theory
    Back In to the Cyber Conflict Debate.” Journal of Strategic Studies
    36(1): 125–33.
  • Galinec, Darko, Darko Možnik, and Boris Guberina. 2017. “Cybersecurity
    and Cyber Defence: National Level Strategic Approach.” Automatika
    58(3): 273–86.
  • Renard, Thomas. 2018. “EU Cyber Partnerships: Assessing the EU Strategic
    Partnerships with Third Countries in the Cyber Domain.” European Politics and Society
    19(3): 321–37
  • Mumford et. al. “The Need for International Perspectives to Solve Global
    Biosecurity
  • Challenges” Chapter 18 in Practical Tools for Plant and Food
    Biosecurity, 2017.

 

Day 8 – Wednesday, April 10 – The Health of the EU: Migration, Disease and
Agricultural Security

Topics: Migration, Food Security
 
Readings:

  • Huysmans, Jeff. 2000. “The European Union and the Securitization of
    Migration.” Journal of Common Market Studies 38: 751–77.
  • Galbreath, David, and Joanne McEvoy. 2012. “European Organizations and
    Minority Rights in Europe: On Transforming the Securitization
    Dynamic.” Security Dialogue 43(3): 267–84.
  • Schumacher, Tobias. 2015. “Uncertainty at the EU’s Borders: Narratives
    of EU External Relations in the Revised European Neighbourhood Policy
    towards the Southern Borderlands.” European Security 24(3):
    381–401.
  • Perkowski, Nina. 2018. “Frontex and the Convergence of Humanitarianism,
    Human Rights and Security.” Security Dialogue: 096701061879667.
  • Bureau, Jean-Christophe and Johan Swinnen. 2018. “EU Policies and global
    food security.” Global Food Security 16: 106-115.
  • European Commission, 2017. A European One Health Action Plan against Antimicrobial
    Resistance
    .

 

Day 9 – Thursday, April 11 – Balancing Security and Democracy in the
European Context

Topics: Security, democracy, rights
 
Readings:

  • Huysmans, Jef. 2016. “Democratic Curiosity in Times of
    Surveillance.” European Journal of International Security1(1):
    73–93.
  • Aradau, Claudia. 2004. “Security and the Democratic Scene:
    Desecuritization and Emancipation.” Journal of International Relations and Development
    7: 388–413.
  • Aradau, Claudia, and Tobias Blanke. 2018. “Governing Others: Anomaly and
    the Algorithmic Subject of Security.” European Journal of International Security
    3(1): 1–21.
  • Fabbrini, Federico. 2018. “Courts and the Politics of Secrecy: National
    Security, Human Rights and the Importance of Supranational
    Oversight.” West European Politics 41(4): 869–89.

 

Friday, April 12 – Workshop in Dauer 215 from 8:15 am – 5:00pm

Co-funded by the Erasmus+ programme of the European Union

Contact

Amie Kreppel
Director of Jean Monnet Center of Excellence
3324 Turlington Hall
kreppel@ufl.edu
(352) 294-7148


Erasmus+ Logo and Disclaimer

The European Commission support for this website does not constitute an endorsement of its contents, which reflect the views of the author. The Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information given.