NarcÃs Serra
Professor and President
International Relations
Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals (IBEI)
Spain
Biography
Narcís Serra has been the president of IBEI since its foundation in 2004, encouraging its efforts to turn Barcelona into a reference city for international studies. Narcís Serra has a BA in Economics from the University of Barcelona, where he was assistant lecturer. Between 1970 and 1972 he studied Monetary Economy as a Research Fellow at the London School of Economics. In 1973 he was awarded a PhD in Economics by the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB) and three years later he was appointed Lecturer in Economic Theory, first at the University of Seville and then at the UAB. Following this academic experience, in 1977 he was appointed regional Minister of Town and Country Planning and Public Works in the Catalan Government presided over by Josep Tarradellas, and in April 1979 he became Mayor of Barcelona. In 1982 he was appointed Spanish Minister of Defence in the Government of Felipe González and in 1991 he became Deputy Prime Minister. From 1986 until 2004, Narcís Serra was also a member of the Spanish Parliament representing the province of Barcelona. Currently, his main lines of interest are the development of foreign policy, relations between the armed forces and society and the mechanisms of global governance, especially in the field of security. The books he has published include The Military Transition (Debate, 2008, in Spanish; Cambridge University Press, 2010, in English) and, together with Joseph Stiglitz, The Washington Consensus Reconsidered (Oxford University Press, 2008).
Research Interest
Civil-Military Relations and Global governance
Publications
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Joseph Stiglitz; Serra, NarcÃs2008The Washington Consensus Reconsidered. Towards a New Global GovernanceOxford:Oxford University Press
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Serra, NarcÃs2008La Transición Militar. Reflexiones en torno a la reforma democrática de las fuerzas armadasBarcelona:Random House Mondadori, Debate
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Serra, NarcÃs2010The Military Transition. Democratic Reform of the Armed ForcesCambridge University Press