We Saw it Coming: Jihadist Terrorism, Challenges for the European Union
Nothing about the recent Paris or Copenhagen terrorist attacks was totally unexpected. Indeed, they were the sort of thing that security apparatuses in Europe had been preparing to have to deal with. Although security responses to terrorism are traditionally considered a quintessential national sovereignty prerogative, in the past ten to fifteen years the recognition that highly asymmetric security threats respect no borders has heightened the EU’s role as a coordinator in this policy domain. Some claim that counter-terrorism has changed the role and functioning of the EU itself towards a more operational character in security matters. Both old and new security responses to terrorism have (re-)emerged on the agenda of the EU and its member states in the ‘post-Paris attacks’ phase.
Evaluating Power Political Repertoires (EPOS)
EPOS har som mål å skape et systematisk problemskifte i hvordan maktpolitikk studeres ved å flytte det analytiske fokuset fra statenes maktressurser og verdenspolitikkens systematiske evner, til de fa...
Hybridkrig skaper nye utfordringer
NUPI leder et stort internasjonalt prosjekt om hybrid krigføring. Debatten om hybridkrig har relevans langt utover akademiske kretser.
Afghanistan - 2000-tallets sikkerhetspolitiske laboratorium
Et nytt nummer av Internasjonal Politikk er nå tilgjengelig der Norges innsats i Afghanistan er tema.
Mali and the Sahel – the geopolitics of conflict, collusion and collaboration
Mali og Sahel-regionen står fortsatt overfor en akutt krise.
Våpenkappløpet
Rammeavtalen som garanterer at Iran ikke utvikler atomvåpen er signert. Hva betyr det for Tyrkias fremtid?