Dr Gorana Grgić

Dr Gorana Grgić

Haldeneggsteig 4
8092 Zürich
Switzerland

Mail:

Dr Gorana Grgić is a Senior Researcher with the Swiss and Euro-Atlantic Security team at the ETH Zürich’s Center for Security Studies (CSS). Gorana is also a non-resident external pageSenior Lecturer at the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney and an external pageExpert Associate with the National Security College at the Australian National University.

In recent years, Gorana was a continuing Senior Lecturer at the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney. She was also a Research Fellow in Grand Strategy at the Hertie School’s Centre for International Security, Partners Across the Globe Research Fellow at the NATO Defense College, Visiting Fellow at the Harvard Center for European Studies, and Visiting Lecturer in US Foreign Policy at the University of Western Australia.

Gorana’s research interests include US and EU foreign policy, transatlantic relations, conflict resolution, and democratisation. Gorana’s research projects and teaching activities have been funded by the European Commission, NATO, Australian Research Council, Australian Department of Defence, and the United States Institute of Peace.

As a firm believer in translating scholarly work to help improve public debate and decision making, Gorana consulted government and corporate entities in Australia, United States, and Europe. She has also been a regular contributor to the major international broadcasters such as Bloomberg, CNBC, BBC, and the Guardian.

Gorana is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (Advance HE) and a recipient of multiple teaching awards for teaching excellence and innovation. Beyond tertiary education, she has an extensive experience in delivering executive education and corporate masterclasses on international politics and security.

Prior to her academic career, Gorana worked for the United Nations Development Programme in Croatia and Special Broadcasting Service in Australia.

Gorana holds a PhD and Masters in International Relations from the University of Sydney, BEcon (Hons) in Macroeconomics (summa cum laude) from the University of Zagreb with an academic exchange at the National University of Singapore.

Selected publications

Books:

external pageGrgić, G. 2017. Ethnic conflict in asymmetric federations: comparative experience of the former Soviet and Yugoslav regions. Oxon, Abingdon: Routledge

Book chapters:

external pageGrgić, G. 2023. What Type of Actor? The EU's Strategy for Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific. In The EU in a Globalized World (pp. 132-151). Routledge.

Articles:

external pageGrgić, G. 2023. “Ambition, meet reality: EU’s actorness in the Indo-Pacific”, International Political Science Review

external pageBerti, B., Elgin, K., Grgić, G., and M. Vandewall. 2023. U.S. Alliance Management in the Shadow of Sino-American Competition, Defence Studies

external pageGrgić, Gorana, Đuro Kolar and Maja Bašić, 2022. Infrastructure diplomacy and strategic signalling within the Three Seas Initiative, Southeast European and Black Sea Studies.

external pageGrgić, G. 2021. “The Changing Dynamics of Regionalism in Central and Eastern Europe: The Case of the Three Seas Initiative”, Geopolitics.

external pageGrgić, G. 2024. "Redefining NATO’s Indo-Pacific Partnerships: Cooperative Security Meets Collective Defence and Deterrence", Asian Security, (pp. 1–17).

Reports:

external pageNanlohy, S. and G. Grgić. 2024. Geostrategic Trends and Atrocity Risk: Understanding the Risk of Mass Atrocities in a Changing Global and Regional Context, Australian Army Occasional Paper No. 19

external pageUnited States Institute of Peace. 2024. Report of the Expert Study Group on NATO and Indo-Pacific, February 2024.

Gilli A, Gilli M, Grgić G, Henke M, Lanoszka A, Meijer H, Scaglioli L, Silove N, Simón L, Smeets MW. 2022. Strategic Shifts and NATO’s New Strategic Concept. NDC Research Paper.

external pageGrgić, G. 2021. “Partners Across the Globe and NATO’s Strategic Concept”, NATO Defense College Research Brief, No. 16

external pageGrgić, G. 2021. “Out-of-area conundrum in the context of NATO 2030”, NATO Defense College Research Brief, No. 13


Further publications available via external pageGoogle Scholar
 

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