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NUPI skole

Diplomacy and foreign policy

What are the key questions related to diplomacy and foreign policy?
Publications
Publications
Report

The EEA and Norway Grants as a source of Soft Power

  • Foreign policy
  • The EU
  • Foreign policy
  • The EU
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Norsk russlandspolitikk

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

Fallgruver på veien

  • Diplomacy
  • International organizations
  • United Nations
  • Diplomacy
  • International organizations
  • United Nations
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Mer åpenhet om norsk krigsdeltakelse

  • Foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
Publications
  • Development policy
Publications
  • Development policy
Publications
Publications
Book

Det glemte partnerskapet? Norge og Storbritannia i et nytt århundre

  • Foreign policy
  • Europe
  • Governance
  • Foreign policy
  • Europe
  • Governance
Event
12:00 - 18:00
Litteraturhuset, Henrik Wergeland-salen
Norsk
Event
12:00 - 18:00
Litteraturhuset, Henrik Wergeland-salen
Norsk
4. Dec 2012
Event
12:00 - 18:00
Litteraturhuset, Henrik Wergeland-salen
Norsk

Norway's Russia policy: Realistic or idealistic?

How has Norway's policy towards Russia developed over the last 20 year? Is it governed by interests, values or both? And how successful is our Russia policy?

Publications
Publications
Report

Inter-cultural dialogue in international crisis

  • Security policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Conflict
  • Security policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Conflict
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Practices as Models: A Methodology with an Illustration Concerning Wampum Diplomacy

The everyday meaning of ‘practice’ is something like concrete ‘doings’ or ‘what is being done’ in a social setting. Its everyday counter-concept is theory. Intuitively, this may lead us to think of practices as what is really going on in the world, as opposed to theories or models. This commonsensical meaning of practices reinforces the separation between theory and empirical reality. We argue that such an understanding has informed much of the ongoing ‘practice turn’ in International Relations. We also argue that this is not necessarily an efficient way of conceptualising ‘practices’, because practices might end up being too general a concept to be analytically useful. To counter this, we argue, one must be explicit about practices at the level of models, that is, in fictional representations of the world. This can help in studying them as endogenous phenomena, and not only as the practical counterpart of some other phenomena, or emanating from unspoken theoretical assumptions of, for example, conscious rule-following behaviour, interests, identities, structures and so on. As an illustration of what a model of practice might look like, we include a case study of Iroquois diplomacy as practice. Using a model, without relying on unstated assumptions exogenous to it, we represent this particular case through assuming that both the agents and their social environments emerge through practices.

  • Diplomacy
  • Diplomacy
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