The REDS Seminar Series features Stephen Kotkin for the seminar on European Security: Past, Present Future on October 13, 2022 at 12:00PM PT.

Traditionally, definitions of security emphasized military defenses and alliances against potential adversaries. Over the last few decades, of course, everything from financial flows and technology transfer, water and energy supplies, trade relationships, to information security and social media disinformation have demanded increasing attention, alongside or instead of hard power. Nowhere have notions of security been more multidimensional, and less militaristic, than in Europe.

Has Russia's full-scale war in Ukraine forced an enduring correction back to traditional notions? Or are some changes predating the war destined to persist? Can geopolitics return if it never went away? What is the future of the fiscal-military state? Is the modern state fit for purpose any more? What is technology actually doing to governance, if anything? How might security depend on new or reinvented institutions? Is China an even bigger game-changer than Russia for European security? Is there, could there be, a pivot to Asia, or is that a nonsense? So many questions -- how do we begin to sift them, and order them, to establish a workable framework with which to build notions of security that could last?


kotkin_hoover.jpg

Stephen Kotkin is an FSI senior fellow affiliated with APARC and CDDRL. He is also the Kleinheinz Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and founding director of the Hoover History Lab.

Kotkin is the Birkelund Professor in History and International Affairs emeritus at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs (formerly the Woodrow Wilson School), where he taught for 33 years. He earned his PhD at the University of California–Berkeley. Kotkin’s research encompasses geopolitics and authoritarian regimes in history and in the present. His publications include Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941 (Penguin, 2017) and Stalin: Paradoxes of Power, 1878–1928 (Penguin, 2014), two parts of a planned three-volume history of Russian power in the world and of Stalin’s power in Russia.

 


REDS: RETHINKING EUROPEAN DEVELOPMENT AND SECURITY

The REDS Seminar Series aims to deepen the research agenda on the new challenges facing Europe, especially on its eastern flank, and to build intellectual and institutional bridges across Stanford University, fostering interdisciplinary approaches to current global challenges.

REDS is organized by The Europe Center and the Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law, and co-sponsored by the Hoover Institution.

Upcoming Events

Monday, November 3, 2025
Jimmy Lai at Hoover, October 2019
From Press to Protest to Prison: Jimmy Lai and the End of Hong Kong Freedom
The Hoover Institution Program on the US, China, and the World invites you to a roundtable on From Press to Protest to Prison: Jimmy Lai and the End… Annenberg Conference Room, George P. Shultz Building
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Campus & Country: Trust, Democracy, And Higher Education
The Center for Revitalizing American Institutions (RAI) hosts Campus & Country: Trust, Democracy, and Higher Education with Brandice Canes-Wrone… Annenberg Conference Room, George P. Shultz Building
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Daniel Flynn Book Talk
Book Talk: "The Man Who Invented Conservatism" By Daniel Flynn
The Hoover History Lab and Hoover Institution Library & Archives invite you to a special hybrid event with Daniel Flynn to discuss his recent… Shultz Auditorium, Stanford, California
overlay image