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Researcher

Benjamin de Carvalho

Research Professor
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Contactinfo and files

bdc@nupi.no
+(47) 414 29 826
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Summary

Benjamin de Carvalho is a research professor at NUPI, working in the Research group on Global Order and Diplomacy (GOaD). His research interests have, broadly speaking, been between three areas: (i) historical international relations, (ii) UN peacekeeping, and (iii) status in international relations.

Within these fields, he has published on issues of broader historical change such as the formation of the nation-state in Europe, sovereignty, and the role played by confessionalization and religion. He has also been involved in a number of projects on UN peacekeeping, and has worked on the protection of civilians and sexual and gender-based violence in Liberia, Chad, and the Sudans. He is also involved in projects addressing status as a key driver of foreign policy, focusing on Norway and Brazil. Central issues here are the role played by small states in international politics, emerging powers and great power responsibility. Other research interests include hegemony, popular culture and international relations theory.

De Carvalho is currently involved in work of more historical character. He is currently the Principal Investigator of Empires, Privateering and the Sea (EMPRISE), a project funded by the Research Council of Norway addressing the importance of privateering for the formation of overseas empires in the Atlantic (1556-1856). He is also the main collaborator in Conceptual History of International Relations (CHOIR), led by Halvard Leira.

In addition, de Carvalho has played an important role in the institutionalization of Historical International Relations as a subfield of the discipline of International Relations. Together with Leira, he was instrumental in setting up the Historical International Relations Section of the ISA, of which he has served as section program chair (2015-2017) and section chair (2017-2019). Leira and de Carvalho are also co-editors of the four-volume set Historical International Relations.

He is formerly a co-editor of the leading Scandinavian-language International Relations-journal Internasjonal Politikk.

Benjamin is Editor in Chief of the journal Cooperation and Conflict, 2023-2027.

Expertise

  • Globalisation
  • Diplomacy
  • Foreign policy
  • Peace operations
  • Humanitarian issues
  • Nation-building
  • Oceans
  • United Nations
  • Historical IR

Education

2009 PhD in International Studies, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

2001 MA, New School for Social Research, New York, USA

Work Experience

2006- PhD student/Senior Research Fellow/Research Professor, NUPI

Aktivitet

Publications
  • Europe
  • Governance
Publications
  • International economics
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Sovereignty and Solidarity: Moral Obligation, Confessional England, and the Huguenots

  • Diplomacy
  • Europe
  • Governance
  • Diplomacy
  • Europe
  • Governance
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Brazil: An Aspiring Global Power

  • South and Central America
  • South and Central America
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Engasjement som norsk nasjonal interesse

  • Peace operations
  • United Nations
  • Peace operations
  • United Nations
Publications
  • Africa
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

A genealogy of sovereignty

Publications
Publications
Publications
Report

Belated Courtship? The Uneasy Partnership between Brazil and the EU

The EU accorded the status of “strategic partner” to Brazil in 2007. While the aim of this was to foster more effective cooperation with the Latin American giant, the record of the partnership is less than clear. While the strategic partnership was a clear acknowledgement of Brazil’s aspirations and status potential, it may have been sealed too late to have an impact on Brazil’s trajectory towards a more prominent global role and may mean too little for actually changing the course of EU–Brazil relations. For, viewed from Brasilia, the extent to which the special partnership has affected the relationship between the EU and Brazil remains an open question. Despite its new status as a strategic partner, Brazil’s foreign policy has been surfing on the waves of South–South cooperation schemes. So, while the EU remains a market for Brazilian exports which can-not be overlooked, Brazil’s search for new partners and China’s increased prominence in its trade balance have provided a new range of opportunities in foreign policy. As other states, including Norway, are now working out strategies to seal more formalized relationships with Brazil – and other emerging powers, for that matter – the strategic partnership between Brazil and the EU offers important lessons to take into account. While the strategic partnership was initially more valuable for Brazil, this did not last. Further-more, it was unclear what the new label entailed in practice, and how it was supposed to affect actual cooperation patterns.

  • Trade
  • Globalisation
  • Regional integration
  • The EU
  • Trade
  • Globalisation
  • Regional integration
  • The EU
Research Project
2011 - 2015 (Completed)

Systems of Tax Evasion and Laundering (STEAL)

The project seeks to identify Global Wealth Chains that are the articulation of organized activities between individuals or international entities, developed countries, developing countries, and tax h...

  • International economics
  • International economics
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