Mariia Vladymyrova delivers a guest lecture at the University of Southern Denmark

 

Mariia Vladymyrova delivered a guest lecture on Baltic security to students at the University of Southern Denmark. Her talk addressed the gaps in how public and policy discourse currently assesses the region, aiming to reframe the hybrid threat environment in the Baltics not as a standalone phenomenon, but as a symptom of a broader shift in Europe’s political landscape triggered by the Russian assertive restorationism.
Throughout the lecture, Mariia introduced students to the foundational tenets of deterrence and escalation, highlighting how these frameworks offer a useful lens for examining Baltic security from the early 2000s through to the present day. By tracing the evolution of these dynamics between NATO and Russia over two decades, she encouraged students to think critically about the structural drivers behind today’s security challenges in the region. The session sparked engaging discussion and underscored the importance of bringing nuanced, framework-driven analysis into conversations about European security.

NATO Pirates in the Baltic Sea? Lawfare in Russian Deterrence Strategy

The chapter “NATO Pirates in the Baltic Sea? Lawfare in Russian Deterrence Strategy” explores how lawfare has become integral to Russia’s coercive signaling strategies. Mariia examines the escalating piracy rhetoric employed by Russian officials in response to European states’ detention of shadow fleet vessels suspected of damaging undersea infrastructure in the Baltic. This narrative reveals how the Kremlin appropriates the authority of international law to achieve strategic ends. By characterizing European navies as pirates—against whom international law grants any state universal jurisdiction—Moscow effectively threatens European navies with escalation and legitimizes potential use of force.

Please find the full text available in open access on the official page of the Russia Conference at the Baltic Defense College.