Pablo Pareja Alcaraz
Academic Coordinator
International Relations
Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals (IBEI)
Spain
Biography
Dr. Pablo Pareja Alcaraz is Serra Húnter Lecturer in International Relations at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF) and Academic Coordinator of the Erasmus Mundus Master in Public Policy at the Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals (IBEI) in Barcelona, Spain. A graduate in Political Science and Public Administration, he pursued postgraduate studies at the London School of Economics (MSc in European Studies: EU policy making) and Georgetown University, Washington D.C. (MSc in Foreign Service) between 2001 and 2004. He obtained his PhD from the UPF in 2010 with a thesis on "Actors and International Relations: The role of China and Japan in the construction of East Asia's regional order". Prior to joining the UPF and IBEI, he gained international professional experience at the University of the Western Cape in South Africa, Human Rights Watch, and the Washington Office of El País. In addition, he gained some field experience as an electoral observer in the 2003 electoral process in Cambodia. He is member of the Board of Directors of Spain's United Nations Association since 2007.
Research Interest
China Foreign Policy, East Asian international relations, International Relations, International Order and International Change
Publications
-
Pareja Alcaraz, Pablo.2012La Unión Europea impulsa su presencia en Asia: Comentario a la Decisión 2012/308/PESC del Consejo, de 26 de abril de 2012, relativa a la adhesión de la Unión Europea al Tratado de Amistad y Cooperación en el Sudeste AsiáticoRevista General de Derecho Europeo,vol. 28:1-14
-
Caterina GarcÃa; Pareja Alcaraz, Pablo2013Seguridad, Inc. Las empresas militares y de seguridad privadas en las relaciones internacionales contemporáneasBarcelona:Catalan International Institute for Peace
-
Pareja Alcaraz, Pablo.2015Sino-Spanish relations in the Mediterranean: evolution, dimensions, asymmetries, and challengesMediterranean Quarterly,vol. 26, no. 1:26-39