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NUPI skole

Diplomacy and foreign policy

What are the key questions related to diplomacy and foreign policy?
Et digitalt verdenskart med illustrerte cyberangrep
Forskningsprosjekt
2020 - 2022 (Completed)

Cybersecurity Capacity Centre for Southern Africa (C3SA)

C3SA informs policy through cybersecurity research to build national cyber capacity and resilience across Africa....

  • Security policy
  • Cyber
  • Development policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Fragile states
  • International organizations
  • Security policy
  • Cyber
  • Development policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Fragile states
  • International organizations
Research project
2021 - 2024 (Ongoing)

Public–Private Development Interfaces in Ethiopia (DEVINT)

Private actors are increasingly operating in the name of development and in partnership with international development actors. This project (DEVINT) will explore the nexus of private actors and public...

  • Economic growth
  • Globalisation
  • Development policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Africa
  • Human rights
  • Governance
  • International organizations
  • United Nations
  • Economic growth
  • Globalisation
  • Development policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Africa
  • Human rights
  • Governance
  • International organizations
  • United Nations
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Differentiated Integration and Europe’s Global Role: A Conceptual Framework

In a time of global challenges, rising geopolitical tensions and a weakening of the traditional trans-Atlantic security community, we can expect pressures for Europe to play a more important role in the world. Various initiatives have been taken to strengthen the role of the European Union (EU), but there are also tendencies towards a more complex European governance structure in the making, characterized by a combination of both EU and non-EU (but still European) initiatives. This introductory article presents a framework for studying a European role that includes initiatives taken within and outside the EU framework, but closely interlinked, indicating that the concept of differentiated integration (DI) may help to clarify Europe’s role in a changing and volatile global context.

  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • Europe
  • Global governance
  • The EU
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  • Defence and security
  • Security policy
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • Europe
  • Global governance
  • The EU
Articles
New research
Articles
New research

Transnational Ecosystems Cooperation is Taking off

Do these efforts to govern border-crossing ecosystems have unique effects that matter for global politics more generally?
  • Diplomacy
  • Foreign policy
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • South and Central America
  • The Arctic
  • Climate
  • Oceans
  • Governance
  • International organizations
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Publications
Publications
Book

Performing Nuclear Weapons: How Britain Made Trident Make Sense

This book investigates the UK’s nuclear weapon policy, focusing in particular on how consecutive governments have managed to maintain the Trident weapon system. The question of why states maintain nuclear weapons typically receives short shrift: its security, of course. The international is a perilous place, and nuclear weapons represent the ultimate self-help device. This book seeks to unsettle this complacency by re-conceptualizing nuclear weapon-armed states as nuclear regimes of truth and refocusing on the processes through which governments produce and maintain country-specific discourses that enable their continued possession of nuclear weapons. Illustrating the value of studying nuclear regimes of truth, the book conducts a discourse analysis of the UK’s nuclear weapons policy between 1980 and 2010. In so doing, it documents the sheer imagination and discursive labour required to sustain the positive value of nuclear weapons within British politics, as well as providing grounds for optimism regarding the value of the recent treaty banning nuclear weapons.

  • Defence and security
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
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  • Defence and security
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
Articles
Analysis
Articles
Analysis

Studying Nuclear Storytelling: How Britain Makes Its Bomb Make Sense

How did consecutive British governments maintain the idea that its nuclear weapons are a legitimate, desirable and a sensible way to spend scarce resources? This is the key question in Senior Research Fellow Paul Beaumont's new book.
  • Defence
  • Security policy
  • NATO
  • Foreign policy
  • Europe
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Publications
Publications
Scientific article

The Intercity Origins of Diplomacy: Consuls, Empires, and the Sea

City diplomacy is a fairly new topic in the study of diplomacy, and, many would argue, a fairly recent empirical phenomenon. A counterpoint to this could be to reference how the alleged origin of diplomacy in Greek antiquity was city-centered, as were the earliest forms of Renaissance diplomacy in Italy. In this article we want to probe the connections between cities and diplomacy through problematizing what has counted as diplomacy. Our starting point is that cities have always mattered to what we could analytically refer to as diplomatic practice. Being conscious of the conceptual ambiguities, we are thus not starting from a specific definition of “city diplomacy,” but from a conviction that cities have mattered and continue to matter to the practice of diplomacy.

  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Theory and method
  • Historical IR
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  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Theory and method
  • Historical IR
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Russia's Neighborhood Policy and Its Eurasian Client States: No Autocracy Export

Do authoritarian regimes engage in active export of their political systems? Or are they primarily concerned about their geopolitical interests? This article explores these questions by examining Russia's policy towards Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Transnistria. In all three de facto states, Moscow is fully able to dictate election outcomes should it desire to, but, we argue, has increasingly refrained from doing so. These client states are unlikely to attempt to escape from Russia’s tutelage; and with its geopolitical interests fully ensured, Russia appears willing to grant them latitude. We then ask whether these findings can be extrapolated to serve as a template for understanding Russia's policy towards its client states more generally, discussing Moscow's reactions to attempted regime change in Armenia and Belarus.

  • Global economy
  • Regional integration
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Peace, crisis and conflict
  • Fragile states
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  • Global economy
  • Regional integration
  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • Peace, crisis and conflict
  • Fragile states
Andreas Lind Kroknes
Researchers

Andreas Lind Kroknes

Advisor

Andreas Lind Kroknes works as an advisor in the Research Group on Peace, Conflict and Development.Kroknes completed his Master's degree in Politic...

  • Security policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Africa
  • Conflict
  • Fragile states
  • Security policy
  • Foreign policy
  • Africa
  • Conflict
  • Fragile states
Publications
Publications
Scientific article

Why the Nordic states maintain differentiated foreign policies

Nordic governments frequently broadcast their ambition to do more together on the international stage. In this blog post, Kristin Haugevik and Ole Jacob Sending explain why we still shouldn’t expect to see any profound increase in joint Nordic foreign policy positions and actions – and especially not when it comes to relations with greater powers.

  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • The Nordic countries
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  • Diplomacy and foreign policy
  • Diplomacy
  • Foreign policy
  • Regions
  • The Nordic countries
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