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Russia and Eurasia

The Russian Federation is the dominant country in Eurasia.

Russia’s foreign policy is a central theme in NUPI’s research on Russia and Eurasia. Also important are energy and economic issues, given Russia’s standing as a major producer of oil and gas. Other priority research fields are ethnicity, nation-building, nationalism and national identity, as well as democracy and human rights.
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Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Russian Expert and Official Geopolitical Narratives on the Arctic: Decoding Topical and Paradigmatic DNA

This article examines current Russian expert and official narratives on the Arctic, situating them in the broader context of the debate on Russia’s role in the international system. Combining a critical geopolitics approach to the study of international relations with content analysis tools, we map how structural geopolitical changes in the wider region have shaped narratives on the Arctic in Russia today. Two types of Russian narratives on the Arctic are explored—the one put forward by members of the Russian expert community, and the one that emerges from official documents and statements by members of the Russian policymaking community. With the expert narratives, we pay particular attention to the Arctic topics featured and how they are informed by various mainstream approaches to the study of international relations (IR). In examining policy practitioners’ narrative approaches, we trace the overlaps and differences between these and the expert narratives. Current expert and official Russian narratives on the Arctic appear to be influenced mostly by neorealist and neoliberal ideas in IR, without substantial modifications after the 2014 conflict, thus showing relatively high ideational continuity.

  • Security policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • The Arctic
  • Security policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • The Arctic
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Violent Mobilization and Non-Mobilization in the North Caucasus

Introduction and overview over violent mobilization in the North Caucasus: Recent developments and context, conflicting identities, state and sub-state violence, causes and limits of violent mobilization in the region.

  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Conflict
  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Conflict
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Exclusion and Inclusion: The Core of Chechen Mobilization to Jihad

The article explores the broad social and relational drivers behind mobilization of Chechens into armed jihad in the Levant. It suggests that the core mobilizing tool in a process toward violent (re-)action is a narrative that projects the Other as so different from, and so dangerous to the Self that the use of violence is legitimized. Moreover, the shift to more radical representations of the other group occurs in a mutual pattern of imagining and interaction between groups. The mobilization of Chechens into armed jihad is explained with reference to the physical and social exclusion of Chechens in Russia and how these experiences have been interpreted and narrated on the one hand and the attempted inclusion of Chechnya/North Caucasus by the global jihadi milieu on the other hand.

  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Conflict
  • Insurgencies
  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Conflict
  • Insurgencies
Bildet viser Russlands president Vladimir Putin og tidligere leder for Abkhazia, Raul Khadzhimba, i samtale foran sine respektive flagg i 2017
Research project
2020 - 2026 (Ongoing)

Dynamics of de facto state patron-client relations (DeFacto)

Almost all de facto states that survive for some time have a powerful 'patron' that provides security guarantees and economic support. Too often this has resulted in the de facto states simp...

  • Development policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Conflict
  • Governance
  • Development policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Conflict
  • Governance
Publications
Publications
Report

Putin’s Ancien Régime

After 20 years with Vladimir Putin in power, Putin’s Russia is becoming an ancien régime. The gap between Russia’s aspirations for a significant global role, and its ability and capacity to sustain such a role (always a challenge for Russia’ rulers), is now growing. Putin has not learned from history and from his predecessors. Russia continues to try to punch above its weight, with attempts to destabilize by creating new geopolitical “realities,” as in the case of Crimea. At home, the population is dissatisfied, and the regime is under pressure to come up with new solutions to old problems.

  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Nationalism
  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Nationalism
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Governing the Arctic: The Russian State Commission for Arctic Development and the Forging of a New Domestic Arctic Policy Agenda

After a period of relative neglect in the 1990s and early 2000s, the Arctic is back on the agenda of the Russian authorities. To ensure efficient coordination and implementation of its Arctic strategy, the government in 2015 established a State Commission for Arctic Development. It was to serve as a platform for coordinating the implementation of the government’s ambitious plans for the Arctic, for exchange of information among Arctic actors, and for ironing out interagency and interregional conflicts. Based on a case study of the State Commission for Arctic Development, this article has a twofold goal. First, it explores the current Russian domestic Arctic agenda, mapping key actors and priorities and examining the results achieved so far. Second, it discusses what this case study may tell us the about policy formulation and implementation in Russia today. We find that while the government’s renewed focus on the Arctic Zone has yielded some impressive results, the State Commission has been at best a mixed success. The case study demonstrates how, in the context of authoritarian modernization, the Russian government struggles to come up with effective and efficient institutions for Arctic governance. Moreover, the widespread image of a Russian governance model based on a strictly hierarchic "power vertical" must be modified. Russia’s Arctic policy agenda is characterized by infighting and bureaucratic obstructionism: even when Putin intervenes personally, achieving the desired goals can prove difficult.

  • Economic growth
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • The Arctic
  • Economic growth
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • The Arctic
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Renewable energy and geopolitics: A review

This article reviews the literature on the geopolitics of renewable energy. It finds that while the roots of this literature can be traced back to the 1970s and 1980s, most of it has been published from 2010 onwards. The following aggregate conclusions are extracted from the literature: renewable energy has many advantages over fossil fuels for international security and peace; however, renewable energy is thought to exacerbate security risks and geopolitical tensions related to critical materials and cybersecurity; former hydrocarbon exporters will likely be the greatest losers from the energy transition. Many of the reviewed publications share some weaknesses: a failure to define “geopolitics”; an unwarranted assumption that very little has been published in the field previously; limited use of established forecasting, scenario-building or foresight methodologies; a lack of recognition of the complexity of the field; a lack of theorisation. Most authors do not distinguish between the geopolitical risks associated with different types of renewable energy, and only a few distinguish clearly between the geopolitics of the transitional phase and the geopolitics of a post-energy transition world. A disproportionately large part of the literature is dedicated to critical materials and cybersecurity, while only a small part concerns the decline of former fossil fuel powers. Among those publications that do discuss the decline of fossil fuels, there is also an over-focus on oil producers and a lack of attention to the countries that rely heavily on coal, for example Australia, China, Germany, Indonesia, Poland and the United States.

  • Security policy
  • Cyber
  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Energy
  • Security policy
  • Cyber
  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Energy
Tora Berge Naterstad

Tora Berge Naterstad

Former employee

Tora Berge Naterstad was a Researcher at NUPI

  • Security policy
  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Globalisation
  • Regional integration
  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Nation-building
  • Nationalism
  • Security policy
  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Globalisation
  • Regional integration
  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Nation-building
  • Nationalism
Mathilde Tomine Eriksdatter Giske
Researchers

Mathilde Tomine Eriksdatter Giske

Junior Research Fellow (part time)

Mathilde Tomine Eriksdatter Giske is a Junior Research Fellow in the Research group on Security on Defence, working on the «Re-Engaging with Neigh...

  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • Regional integration
  • Foreign policy
  • Europe
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Nation-building
  • Governance
  • International organizations
  • The EU
  • Comparative methods
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • Regional integration
  • Foreign policy
  • Europe
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Nation-building
  • Governance
  • International organizations
  • The EU
  • Comparative methods
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