FT@ifs.ku.dk Fabrizio Tassinari, PhD, is a Non-Resident Fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations at SAIS. Since 2005, he has been an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen and an Associate Fellow at the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) in Brussels. From 2001 to 2004, he worked as a researcher in an EU Commission’s network managed by Humboldt University, Berlin.
Dr. Tassinari writes on issues relating to European integration and security, with particular reference to the political economy of the wider European neighborhood: regional security and cooperation in the Mediterranean, the Western Balkans, the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea; EU and U.S. relations with, i.a., Russia and Turkey.
Among his affiliations, Dr. Tassinari was an Adjunct Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC; is a faculty member at the Università Libera di Bologna (ULIBO); and a member of the “Visionary Group” on the Baltic Sea Region established by the Baltic Development Forum.
Dr. Tassinari earned his PhD in Political Science from the University of Copenhagen. Recent publications include: “Whole, Free and Integrated? A Transatlantic Perspective on the European Neighbourhood”, CEPS Working Document, No. 271,CEPS, Brussels, 2007 “The Pragmatic Option” in Russia in Global Affairs vol. 4 n. 4, 2006 (with Marius Vahl). “A Synergy for Black Sea Regional Cooperation: Guidelines for an EU Initiative” CEPS Policy Brief No. 105, 2006.
Wider Europe (co-ed. with Pertti Joenniemi and Uffe Jakobsen), Danish Institute of International Studies, Copenhagen, 2006. (Downloadable here)
“A New Agreement between the EU and Russia: Why, What and When?” CEPS Policy Brief No. 103, 2006 (with Michael Emerson and Marius Vahl).
“Security and Integration in the EU Neighbourhood: the Case for Regionalism” CEPS Working Document N. 226, Brussels, 2005.
“A Riddle Inside an Enigma: Unwrapping the EU-Russian Strategic Partnership" in the International Spectator vol. 40 n. 1, 2005.
|