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NUPI skole
Nyheter
Nyheter

Prestisjefylt prosjekt til NUPI – skal se på digitalisering og den moderne verdensorden

Et nytt banebrytende, tverrfaglig prosjekt skal se på hvilke sårbarheter som finnes på internett, og hva de politiske følgene er av disse nye utfordringene.

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Cyber
  • Utenrikspolitikk
Arrangement
10:00 - 11:30
Publikumsfoajeen, Nationaltheatret
Norsk
Arrangement
10:00 - 11:30
Publikumsfoajeen, Nationaltheatret
Norsk
6. nov. 2018
Arrangement
10:00 - 11:30
Publikumsfoajeen, Nationaltheatret
Norsk

Frukostmøte: Kva skjer når felleskapet raknar?

Er vi på veg mot ein ny verdsorden der kynisk pragmatisme trumfar demokratiske verdiar?

Nyheter
Nyheter

Fire globale skifter endrer FNs fredsoperasjoner

Den globale orden er i endring. Hva skjer så med FNs fredsoperasjoner? Det er hovedspørsmålet i Cedric de Coning og Mateja Peters nye bok.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
Bildet viser en FN-soldat i Mali
Hvor hender det?
Det følelsesmessige og politiske engasjementet er stort, og synet på historien er delt. Les denne saken for å få mer innsikt i konflikten mellom Israel...
  • Diplomacy
  • The Middle East and North Africa
  • Peace operations
  • Conflict
  • United Nations
Hvor hender det?
Det følelsesmessige og politiske engasjementet er stort, og synet på historien er delt. Les denne saken for å få mer innsikt i konflikten mellom Israel...
  • Diplomacy
  • The Middle East and North Africa
  • Peace operations
  • Conflict
  • United Nations
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Derfor dominerer Abe japansk politikk

Shinzō Abe har nok en gang vunnet det interne presidentvalget i sitt parti. Hvordan ble Abe den mest dominerende statsministeren i Japans historie?

  • Asia
  • Asia
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

Parabasis: Cyber-diplomacy in Stalemate

Governments and industry around the world are working together to bring the next billion users online,1 but their synergies fade when it comes to how to keep online populations safe and secure. Further, the third and fourth billion of Internet users will enter a terrain very different from that available to their predecessors. Vulnerabilities in ICTs as well as de facto exploitation of these vulnerabilities by state and non-state actors has been acknowledged and problematized. Evidence of malicious and hostile operations involving ICTs and the Internet abounds. Uncertain about the true potential of ICTs, governments and users have focused on rules and responsibilities for protecting against cyberattacks, espionage and data manipulation. But where is there an understanding of how to remedy and improve the situation? The first part of this report analyzes and contextualizes the UN First Committee process. The second part offers the authors’ extensions to the theme, analyzing the relative successes and failures of the leading cyberpowers in promoting the world order of their liking. In particular, we analyze how Russia, as the initiator of the First Committee process, has created momentum and gathered support for its calls for specific international regulation and institutionalization of the process on the one hand, and stronger governmental control of the development and use of ICTs and the flow of information on the other. In conclusion, we offer some recommendations for governments wishing to pursue the goal of free and open cyberspace—indeed a rule-based world order. The full text can be read here: http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2569401

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Cyber
  • FN
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Cyber
  • FN
Arrangement
16:00 - 17:30
NUPI
Engelsk
Arrangement
16:00 - 17:30
NUPI
Engelsk
6. nov. 2018
Arrangement
16:00 - 17:30
NUPI
Engelsk

Boklansering: Skatt i Afrika – tvinga, reform og utvikling

'Taxing Africa' ser nærare på debattane rundt skatt og utvikling i Afrika. Kva er dei største utfordringane, og er det moglegheiter for reform?

Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Implementation in practice: The use of force to protect civilians in United Nations peacekeeping

Since the failures of the United Nations of the early 1990s, the protection of civilians has evolved as a new norm for United Nations peacekeeping operations. However, a 2014 United Nations report found that while peacekeeping mandates often include the use of force to protect civilians, this has routinely been avoided by member states. What can account for this gap between the apparently solid normative foundations of the protection of civilians and the wide variation in implementation? This article approaches the question by highlighting normative ambiguity as a fundamental feature of international norms. Thereby, we consider implementation as a political, dynamic process where the diverging understandings that member states hold with regard to the protection of civilians norm manifest and emerge. We visualize this process in combining a critical-constructivist approach to norms with practice theories. Focusing on the practices of member states’ military advisers at the United Nations headquarters in New York, and their positions on how the protection of civilians should be implemented on the ground, we draw attention to their agency in norm implementation at an international site. Military advisers provide links between national ministries and contingents in the field, while also competing for being recognized as competent performers of appropriate implementation practices. Drawing on an interpretivist analysis of data generated through an online survey, a half-day workshop and interviews with selected delegations, the article adds to the understanding of norms in international relations while also providing empirical insights into peacekeeping effectiveness.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • FN
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
kapittel

Norway: NATO in the North?

When the NATO allies agreed to deploy troops to the Baltic states and Poland in 2014 to deter against potential Russian aggression, Norway did not ask for a similar arrangement. Despite bordering the heavily militarised Kola peninsula, Norway is now the only NATO country neighbouring Russia without a permanent allied presence. Why is this so? The chapter discusses the background for this policy, which often is summarised in the claim ‘Norway is NATO in the North’, and question if Norway really is NATO in the North in terms of deterrence. The chapter then discuss current Norwegian threat perceptions and various security policy orientations that may contradict each other. For instance, Norway seeks to signal peacetime control and situational awareness of the High North to the rest of NATO, but also to attract allies to training and exercises. Furthermore, Norway seeks to signal both deterrence and restraint, as well as reassurance, to Russia. These different security policies, the chapter argues, may not always be easily combined into a coherent policy.

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • NATO
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • NATO
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