Geir Lundestad (17 January 1945 – 22 September 2023) was a Norwegian historian, who until 2014 served as the director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute when Olav Njølstad took over. In this capacity, he also served as the secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. However, he was not a member of the committee itself.[2][3][4]
Personal life
Born in Sulitjelma on 17 January 1945, Lundestad was a son of rector Bjarne Lundestad and Anny Elvine Nilsen-Nygaard. He married Aase Synnøve Liland in 1967.[1]
Career
Lundestad studied history at the University of Oslo and University of Tromsø, graduating in 1970 with a cand.philol. degree and in 1976 with a doctorate respectively. From 1974 to 1990, he held various positions as Lecturer and Professor at the University of Tromsø before beginning his positions with the Norwegian Nobel Institute and Committee. Subsequently, he was associated with the University of Oslo as an Adjunct Professor of International History. Lundestad spent several years in the United States as a research fellow, at Harvard University, from 1978 to 1979 and again in 1983, and at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, D.C., between 1988 and 1989.[2]
From 1990 to 2014 he served as the director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute, as well as being secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. During this period the Nobel Institute became a significant institution for research on contemporary history, where Lundestad contributed in his capacity as expert on American history and the Cold War. He was also a proponent for establishing the Nobel Peace Center, which opened in 2005.[1]
"Empire " by Integration: The United States and European Integration 1945–1997. (Oxford, 1998.)[1] Japanese edition 2005.
No End to Alliance. The United States and Western Europe: Past, Present, and Future. (edited by Lundestad, Macmillan 1998.)[1]
'Imperial Overstretch', Mikhail Gorbachev, and the End of the Cold War (edited by Lundestad, 2000)[citation needed]
“The Nobel Peace Prize” in Agneta Wallin Levinovitz and Nils Ringertz, eds., The Nobel Prize. The First 100 Years. (London – Singapore, 2001).[citation needed]
War and Peace in the 20th Century and Beyond . (edited with Olav Njølstad, Singapore, 2002)[citation needed]
The United States and Western Europe Since 1945: From “Empire” by Invitation to Transatlantic Drift. (Oxford, 2003, paperback 2005), Norwegian edition 2004.[1]
Just Another Major Crisis? The United States and Europe Since 2000. (edited by Lundestad, Oxford 2008)[citation needed]
The Rise and Decline of the American "Empire". Power and its Limits in Comparative Perspective. (Oxford, 2012)[1]
International Relations Since the end of the Cold War. New & Old Dimensions in International Relations. (edited by Lundestad, Oxford, 2013)[citation needed]