Skip to content
NUPI skole

Defence and security

What are the central questions related to defence and security?
Media
Media
Media

Dagsnytt 18 om NATO-Russland relasjonene

Interview in Norwegian

  • Defence and security
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
FriisDax18okt1921.png
  • Defence and security
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
Media
Media
Media

NRK-intervju om NATOs forsvarsministermøte 22. oktober

Interview in Norwegian

  • Defence and security
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Defence and security
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
Media
Media
Media

Al-Jazeera: Interiew about Ukraine and Biden-Putin meeting

I commented upon the Biden-Putin meeting that took place 7 December 2021. The topic was Ukraine.

  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • North America
Karsten-Friis-Al-Jazeera_large.png
  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • North America
Publications
Publications
Report

Nordic cooperation amid pandemic travel restrictions

Since 2020, the Nordic countries have been confronted with the Covid-19 pandemic, which has been a multi-level stress test for the region. The strong basis of open borders and free movement in Nordic cooperation has been questioned by national pandemic measures, including wide travel restrictions. The Nordic dimension to pandemic responses has largely been missing, the trust between the countries has arguably been put to test and cross-border commuters have been subjected to differential treatment. Especially cross-border regions have suffered the consequences of travel restrictions, causing disruptions to work and private life. The report draws attention to the preparedness of the Nordic Region to jointly confront global crises. It explores the different strategies and travel restrictions adopted by four Nordic countries: Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. It also studies how Nordic cooperation functioned in a time of crisis. At the local level, it examines the economic, labour market and social implications for three cross-border regions, that is, Tornedalen, Svinesund and Öresund. The report finds that while there is room for improvement in handling a crisis like the pandemic, there are diverging views on the desirability to have all-Nordic approaches to situations affecting national security. The consequences are, however, serious for free movement and the aim to become the most integrated region in the world.

  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • Global economy
  • Regional integration
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • The Nordic countries
  • Peace, crisis and conflict
  • Pandemics
FIIAreport68Nov2021.png
  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • Global economy
  • Regional integration
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • The Nordic countries
  • Peace, crisis and conflict
  • Pandemics
Publications
Publications
Report

Nordic partnership choices in a fierier security environment: Towards more alignment

Nordic states’ partnership choices in security and defence are more aligned than they were a decade ago. When Danish, Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish government officials now identify key security challenges and partners, and reflect on the potential for Nordic cooperation, they have the same reference points and use similar wording. Since 2014, the toolbox for Nordic defence cooperation has also solidified and different formal affiliations with NATO and the EU seem to matter less than before. Furthermore, an array of multi- and minilateral cooperation structures have emerged across and beyond the EU and NATO, expanding the possibilities for Nordic cooperation under a larger Euro-Atlantic umbrella. However, two limitations remain: First, Nordic security and defence cooperation still remains subordinate to and a supplement rather than an alternative to NATO. Second, putting Nordic response mechanisms into practice remains dependent not only on the context and issue at stake, but also on the political appetite of the individual Nordic governments to choose a Nordic solution.

  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Regional integration
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Regions
  • The Nordic countries
NordicPartnershipChoicesInAFierierSecurityEnvironment.png
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Regional integration
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Regions
  • The Nordic countries
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

On digital media in Lebanon's political crisis

The technology-driven transformation of the media environment is changing politics worldwide. Yet everywhere is not the same. The digital revolution yields different results in different political contexts. This policy brief analyses digital media’s role in the political crisis unfolding in Lebanon – a weak, divided and contested state. It discusses the implications for Norwegian development aid to the country. Part 3 of 4 in the series: Digital technology and international politics

  • Defence and security
  • Cyber
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Development policy
  • Regions
  • The Middle East and North Africa
OnDigitalMediaInLebanonsPoliticalCrisis.png
  • Defence and security
  • Cyber
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Development policy
  • Regions
  • The Middle East and North Africa
Publications
Publications
Report

Russian reframing: Norway as an outpost for NATO offensives

Moscow increasingly views the ‘Collective West’ as an offensive actor and the High North as terrain for NATO ‘expansion’. Norway figures as an active partner in this endeavour. For Norway, this situation is precarious: to the degree that Norway is seen as an inimical ‘NATO in the North’, Norwegian policies across a range of issue-areas increasingly risk being perceived as actions in an existential Russia–West struggle. This is worrisome because a key pillar of official Norwegian policy towards Russia involves balancing NATO deterrence with reassurance. As the military/non-military distinction becomes blurred in the eyes of Russia this crucial balancing becomes very difficult – the intended ‘reassuring’ signal might not come across.

  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • The Arctic
Russian Reframing.png
  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • The Arctic
Silje  Nyrud

Silje Nyrud

Former employee

Silje Nyrud was a Graduate Research Fellow at NUPI and part of the Research Group on Security and Defence.

  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Cyber
  • Europe
  • North America
  • The Nordic countries
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • Terrorism and extremism
  • Cyber
  • Europe
  • North America
  • The Nordic countries
Publications
Publications
Report

Chinese digi-tech politics: Steering growth, spurring innovation, and reinforcing control

China is a growing digital technology (digi-tech) power and a leading provider of digi-tech resources internationally. China’s digi-tech growth is helping to create opportunities in other and developing countries, but it also stirring concern regarding digital security and the safeguarding of individual freedoms. Digi-tech is at the heart of the major power rivalry playing out between China and the USA. In this brief, we study the key drivers and main implications of Chinese digi-tech politics while also considering Norwegian digi-tech interests.

  • Defence and security
  • Cyber
  • Global economy
  • International economics
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Development policy
  • Regions
  • Asia
Frontbilde_large.png
  • Defence and security
  • Cyber
  • Global economy
  • International economics
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Development policy
  • Regions
  • Asia
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

COVID-19 and the Resilience of Africa’s Peace and Security Networks

Many commentators predicted that the impact of COVID-19 on Africa, with its high levels of under-development and weak public health systems, will be particularly catastrophic. The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health and economic sectors have exposed and compounded preexisting social, political, and environmental vulnerabilities, especially in conflict-affected countries and regions, and have severely stress-tested their social cohesion and resilience. Global and local peacemaking, peacekeeping and peacebuilding efforts in Africa have also been significantly disrupted. More than 1 year into the COVID-19 pandemic in Africa, however, the emerging pattern is one of resilience rather than insecurity and chaos. This article assesses the disruption caused by COVID-19 to Africa’s peace and security networks and considers how a complexity informed Adaptive Peacebuilding approach can assist in strengthening community resilience and stimulating self-organized adaptive capacity. The spread of the virus is still increasing steadily, and the situation is likely to get worse before it gets better. The question is what can African civil society, governments and multilateral organizations do to further strengthen and support the pattern of resilience that has emerged over the first 1 year of the COVID-19 crises in Africa?

  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
African-Security_large.jpg
  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
311 - 320 of 1308 items