Lecture The causes and consequences of the Ukraine war A lecture by John J. Mearsheimer, Professor at the University of Chicago Add to calendar 2022-06-16 17:00 2022-06-16 18:30 Europe/Rome The causes and consequences of the Ukraine war Sala Europa Villa Schifanoia YYYY-MM-DD Print Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email When 16 June 2022 17:00 - 18:30 CEST Where Sala Europa Villa Schifanoia Organised by Department of History Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Ukraine Professor John J. Mearsheimer will discuss the current Russian invasion on Ukraine whilst exploring the potential causes and consequences of the crisis. In this lecture, Prof. Mearsheimer will aim to focus on both the origins of the war in Ukraine and some of its most important consequences. He will argue that the crisis is largely the result of the West’s efforts to turn Ukraine into a Western bulwark on Russia’s border. Russian leaders viewed that outcome as an existential threat that had to be thwarted. While Vladimir Putin is certainly responsible for invading Ukraine and for Russia’s conduct in the war, Prof. Mearsheimer states that he does not believe he is an expansionist bent on creating a greater Russia. Regarding the war’s consequences, the greatest danger is that the war will go on for months if not years, and that either NATO will get directly involved in the fighting or nuclear weapons will be used — or both. Furthermore, enormous damage has already been inflicted on Ukraine. A prolonged war is likely to wreak even more devastation on Ukraine. Prof. John J. Mearsheimer is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor in the Political Science Department at the University of Chicago. This event will be livestreamed. Links: Livestream Link Contact(s): Sarah Ilyse Bernstein (EUI - Schuman Centre) Speaker(s): Prof. John J. Mearsheimer (The University of Chicago) Scientific Organiser(s): Erik Jones (Director of the Robert Schuman Centre, EUI) Professor Nicolas Guilhot (EUI) Moderator(s): Stephanie Hofmann (EUI - Schuman Centre / SPS)