Rik Coolsaet

Rik Coolsaet is a Belgian academic. He is professor emeritus of International Relations at Ghent University, Belgium and Senior Associate Fellow at Egmont Institute (Royal Institute for International Relations), Brussels.

Coolsaet was invited to join the original European Commission Expert Group on Violent Radicalisation (established 2006) and the subsequent European Network of Experts on Radicalisation (ENER).

Official positions

He has held several high-ranking official positions, such as deputy chief of the Cabinet of the Belgian Minister of Defence Guy Coeme and deputy chief of the Cabinet of the Minister of Foreign Affairs Willy Claes (1988–1992) and deputy chief of the Cabinet of the Minister of Foreign Affairs Willy Claes (1992–1995) where he was in charge for the contacts with the USA regarding the Rwandan genocide.[1] From 2002 until 2009 he served as Director of the "Security & Global Governance" program at the Egmont Institute in Brussels.

Coolsaet was later active in the Cabinets of other socialist ministres such as Frank Vandenbroucke and Erik Derycke (1992–1995).

Publications

Coolsaet's research focuses on Belgian foreign policy, terrorism and radicalisation, security studies, and international relations.[2]

In 1998, he published a study on the history of Belgian foreign policy ("Belgium and its foreign policy 1830–1990", in Dutch and partly in French). The latest revised edition, released in September 2014, pursues this history until 2014 (published only in Dutch). Two other studies on Belgian foreign policy deal with Dutch-Belgian bilateral relations since 1945 (Nederland-België. De Belgisch-Nederlandse betrekkingen vanaf 1940, Boom, 2011, with Duco Hellema and Bart Stol) and with the history of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Les Affaires étrangères au service de l’Etat belge, de 1830 à nos jours (Mardaga, 2014) and, in Dutch, Buitenlandse Zaken in België. Geschiedenis van een ministerie, zijn diplomaten en zijn consuls van 1830 tot vandaag (Lannoo, 2014), with Vincent Dujardin and Claude Roosens.

He has been coordinating research on terrorism and radicalisation, which has resulted in several publications. Jihadi Terrorism and the Radicalisation Challenge. European and American Experiences[3] was published by Ashgate in 2011. This volume was included in the 2012 "Top 150 Books on Terrorism and Counterterrorism", established by the academic journal Perspectives on Terrorism.[4] His analysis on the impact of 9/11 on Europe was published in 2013 in a volume edited by Mohammed Ayoob and Etga Ugur of Michigan State University ("Europe: Reinforcing Existing Trends", in: Assessing the War on Terror. Lynne Rienner, 2013, pp. 137–159). In March 2015 (updated in June 2015, March 2016), the Egmont Institute published his assessment of the drivers motivating young Belgians (and Europeans) to voyage to Syria and join IS.[5]

Coolsaet has also written extensively on international relations, mostly in Dutch. His Macht en Waarden in de Wereldpolitiek ("Power and Values in World Politics", Academia Press) provides for a yearly overview of major trends in global politics. A 2008 publication, De geschiedenis van de wereld van morgen ("A History of Tomorrow’s World", Van Halewyck), analyzed long-term change patterns in international relations. Upon publication in February 2008, this book appeared on the Belgian bookshops' bestseller list for several months.

Bibliography

References

Further reading

External links


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