Asle Toje

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190215 et 4037 Asle Toje.jpg

Asle Toje (born February 16, 1974) is the Deputy Leader of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. He is a foreign policy scholar and a former Research Director at the Norwegian Nobel Institute. Toje is a regular contributor to the Norwegian foreign policy debate, including as a regular columnist in the Dagens Næringsliv, Utrop and Morgenbladet. Toje is a proponent of Neoclassical realism. In the Norwegian foreign policy discourse he has been a proponent of limited government, a free market economy, and liberal conservatism. He has been a spokesman for a strong defense and multilateralism. Toje is considered to belong to the same intellectual tradition as Francis Fukuyama. Toje has in recent years spent most of his time on issues at the intersection of nuclear disarmarment.

Academic career[]

Asle Toje was educated at universities in Oslo and Tromsø before going on to study international relations (Dr. Phil.) at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he graduated in 2006.

He studied under Kenneth Waltz when he stayed as Fulbright Fellow by Columbia University 2004-2005 and was research associate at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies 2007–2008. In 2008, Toje was a visiting scholar at the European Union Institute for Security Studies in Paris. As an academic, Toje is best known for having developed "transatlantic bargain" thesis where he argues that the United States 's presence through the NATO and European integration in the shape of EU is an integrated complex. Geir Lundestad wrote "A thoroughly enjoyable read". He continued: "The fact that NATO and the EU need to be seen together is a point that is well made, especially with regards to enlargement."[1]

In 2010 Toje published the book The European Union as a small power - after the post Cold War which received warm reviews. Among them, historian and foreign policy commentator Robert Kagan, who wrote: "The great strength of Asle Toje's absorbing, detailed and much-needed study is to show what role the European Union might be expected to play under multipolarity."

Philip Stephens of The Financial Times added: "In a striking analysis of foreign and security policy hum the opening Decade of the century, Asle Toje, a scholar at the Norwegian Nobel Institute, concludes That Europe Has Been showing all the Characteristics of a small power - or Rather of a series of small powers as The Limited Influence of the Union co-exists with the constrained power of France, Britain and Germany."[2] The Economist chose the book as one of its "Recommended Reading for the beach".[3]

Private life[]

Toje is married to Anne Kristine Lindblad Toje (b. 1980). They have three children.

Bibliography[]

  • (Oslo, Dreyer, 2020)
  • (Houston, Nobel Press, 2019)
  • (Oxford University Press, Ed. 2018)
  • (Oslo, Dreyer Forlag, 2014)
  • (Oslo, Dreyer Forlag, 2012)
  • Ed. w, B.Kunz (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2012)
  • The European Union as a small power - after the post Cold War (London, Palgrave / Macmillan, 2010)
  • America, the EU and Strategic Culture: Renegotiating the Transatlantic Bargain (London, Routledge, 2008)

References[]

  1. ^ Lundestad, G. (2008) Spalte, Aftenposten, 23 March
  2. ^ http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/84efd5fe-bc55%20-11df-a42b-00144feab49a.html http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/84efd5fe-bc55 -11df-a42b-00144feab49a.html
  3. ^ "Reading for the beach". The Economist. 2010-08-16.

External links[]

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