Menu Close
Senior Lecturer in International Peace & Security, King's College London

Dr Natasha Kuhrt is a Lecturer in International Peace & Security in the Department of War Studies. After gaining a BA first class hons in Russian & German language and literature followed by an MA in Soviet Studies, at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (University of London), she spent several years in publishing before obtaining a PhD at UCL on Russian Policy Towards China and Japan. Dr Kuhrt joined King’s as a visiting lecturer in the Law School in 2002, before going full time in the Department of War Studies in 2009.

Her main teaching has been on the MA in International Peace and Security Programme and in international law and intervention, but she has also delivered guest lectures in the department including on gender and nationalism and Russia’s discourse on memory and history.

In 2011 she established the British International Studies Association Working Group on Russian & Eurasian Security within BISA and she remains co-convenor of this active group with two colleagues at Open University and Glasgow University.

Dr Kuhrt is a member of BISA, Chatham House, ISA, ASEN and BASEES.

Research Interests
Russian and Eurasian security/foreign policy especially in Asia.
International law; Humanitarian Intervention and Responsibility to Protect
Nationalism and identity; populism
Regions and Regionalism
Her interest in Russia and Eurasia has led her to engage more deeply with issues related to regionalism in general, and Eurasian and Asia-Pacific regionalism more specifically. She also has a growing interest in the role of India in the broader Asian/Asia-Pacific region. Her interest in intervention and peacekeeping has led to research in Russian activism in Africa and the nexus with UN peacekeeping missions. She is also currently working with colleagues at Birmingham, Manchester and Japanese academics, on an ESRC UK-Japan project on comparative populism in context. Further, she is collaborating on an British Academy project on ‘Rescaling the Border: Nationalism and Civilisationalism in Central and Eastern Europe’.

Publications
Books/Monographs:

2017 Natasha Kuhrt & Valentina Feklyunina (eds) Assessing Russia’s Power: A Report, Newcastle: British International Studies Association https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/231713
Articles:

2019 (with Filippo Costa Buranelli), ‘Russia and the CIS in 2018: Regionalism or Transregionalism?’, Asian Survey, Vol. 59 No. 1, January/February 2019; DOI: 1525/as.2019.59.1.44
2018 (with Filippo Costa Buranelli), ‘Russia and the CIS in 2017: Russia in Asia: Succumbing to China’s Embrace?’, Asian Survey 58:1, pp.55-64 (January/February) DOI: 1525/as.2018.58.1.55
Book chapters:

2020 (in press): ‘‘1917 in 2017: a “useless past”? remembering and forgetting the Russian Revolution’, in: Rachel Kerr, Henry Redwood and James Gow eds., Reconciliation after War: Transitional Justice in Comparative Perspective, Routledge.
2018 ‘Asia-Pacific and China’ (Chapter 15), pp. 254-269, in Andrei Tsygankov ed., The Routledge Handbook of Russian Foreign Policy, (London and New York: Routledge).
2018 (with Malin Ostvik), ‘The Russian Far East and Russian Security Policy in the Asia-Pacific Region’, pp. 75-95, in Helge Blakkisrud and Elana Wilson Rowe eds., Russia’s Turn to the East: Domestic Policymaking and Regional Cooperation , (Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan/Springer. Open Access).
2017 (with Yulia Kiseleva), Russia and India: Strategic Partnership Put to the Test?’ (Chapter 8), in: Donette Murray and David Brown eds., Power Relations in the Twenty-first Century: Mapping a Multipolar World, (London and New York: Routledge).
2017 ‘'Russia's Normative Power': The Legal Dimension’, in Natasha Kuhrt & Valentina Feklyunina (eds) Assessing Russia’s Power: A Report, Newcastle: British International Studies Association
Policy papers/briefings:

2019 An expanded SCO: reinvigorated, or on the road to redundancy? In Elena Korosteleva et al : Five Years After Maidan: Toward a Greater Eurasia?, GCRF Compass/LSE Ideas https://research.kent.ac.uk/gcrf-compass/wp-content/uploads/sites/169/2019/05/LSE-IDEAS-COMPASS-UPTAKE-Greater-Eurasia.pdf
2018: oral evidence on Russia to UK House of Lords International Relations Committee http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedo cument/international-relations-committee/foreign-policy-in-changed-world- conditions/oral/82130.html
Briefing to Joint Chiefs of Staff, Pentagon, on Russia and North Korea, July 2018, https://nsiteam.com/russia-and-the-dprk-niche-diplomacy/
2017 ‘1917 in 2017: a “useless past”? remembering and forgetting the Russian Revolution’, Russian Analytical Digest no 211, ETH Zurich
https://css.ethz.ch/en/services/digital-library/articles/article.html/efbd4b00-a343-4dc4-90c4-0ef7a537454

Experience

  • –present
    Lecturer in International Peace & Security, King's College London