Raising the Bar
Transatlantic Strategy Group
TAPIR Fellowship


EABC's 2007 Transatlantic Leadership Award



Amcham EU's 2006 Transatlantic Business Award



Dr. Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen

Contact Information

Tel: +45 32 69 88 88

Email: adn@diis.dk

Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen is Senior Fellow at the Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS) and Program Director for DIIS Studies in Terrorism and Counterterrorism. She holds a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University SAIS and has published on a number of topics including homeland security, counter-terrorism, transatlantic relations, American foreign policy, and German security policy. She is a regular commentator on issues of foreign and security policy in Danish electronic and printed media. During the spring of 2006 Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen was the first Danish scholar to conduct field research fully embedded with Danish armed forces deployed to Kosovo, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

Recent Publications

Germany, Pacifism and Peace Enforcement, (Manchester University Press, 2006).

"Muddling through - how the EU is countering new threats to the homeland" in Alyson J. K. Bailes, Gunilla Herolf and Bengt Sundelius (ed.) The Nordic Countries and the European Security and Defence Policy (Sipri/Oxford University Press, 2006).

"Structures and Cultures - Civil Military Cooperation in Homeland Security: The Danish Case" in Esther Brimmer (ed.) Transforming Homeland Security. US and European Approaches, Center for Transatlantic Relations, Politisch-Militärische Gesellschaft, DIIS, 2006.

Culture of Cooperation? Civil-Military Relations in Danish Homeland Security, DIIS Working Paper nr. 2006/2.

Transatlantic Homeland Security. Protecting Society in the Age of Catastrophic Terrorism, (Routledge, 2006) (edited with Daniel Hamilton).

"Review: Parting Ways: The Crisis in German-American Relations," Cooperation and Conflict, 40(4), 2005, pp. 439-441.

"The Test Of Strategic Culture: Germany, Pacifism and Pre-emptive Strikes," Security Dialogue, vol. 36, no. 3, September 2005, pp. 339-356.

Copyright © 2006
Center for Transatlantic Relations
The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS)
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