Peace Capacities Network: Peace Operations, Civilian Capacity and Security Sector Reform in a Changing World Order (PeaceCap )
Peace Capacities Network (PeaceCap) undersøker betydningen fremvoksende stormakter har for fredsoperasjoner, reform av sikkerhetssektoren og for sivile ressurser....
Undermining Hegemony. The US, China, Russia, and International Public Goods
Developments in the last fifteen years have driven renewed interest in hegemonic-stability and power-transition theory. The persistence of US-centered primacy during the 1990s produced new arguments f...
Training for Peace 2011 - 2019 (TfP)
Training for Peace er et internasjonalt program som bidrar til anvendt forskning og policyutvikling innen feltet fredsoperasjoner i Afrika....
The UN at war: examining the consequences of peace-enforcement mandates for the UN peacekeeping operations in the CAR, the DRC and Mali
The UN peacekeeping operations in the Central African Republic (CAR), Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Mali were in 2013 given peace enforcement mandates, ordering them to use all necessary measures to ‘neutralise’ and ‘disarm’ identified groups in the eastern DRC and to ‘stabilise’ CAR and northern Mali. It is not new that UN missions have mandates authorising the use of force, but these have normally not specified enemies and have been of short duration. This article investigates these missions to better understand the short- and long-term consequences, in terms of the willingness of traditional as well as Western troop contributors to provide troops, and of the perception of the missions by host states, neighbouring states, rebel groups, and humanitarian and human rights actors. The paper explores normative, security and legitimacy implications of the expanded will of the UN to use force in peacekeeping operations. It argues that the urge to equip UN peacekeeping operations with enforcement mandates that target particular groups has significant long-term implications for the UN and its role as an impartial arbitrator in post-conflict countries.
Cybertryggleik i internasjonale forum: Kven skal delta?
Private selskap kontrollerer avgjerande delar av det som utgjer cyberspace. Samtidig har cybertryggleik blitt ei statleg oppgåve. Korleis skal vi då organisere internasjonalt samarbeid om cyberspørsmål?
VIDEO: Intervju om forholdet mellom EU og Russland
Se intervjuet av Dr. Arkady Moshes, direktør for forskningsprogrammet EUs østlige nabolag og Russland ved det finske utenrikspolitiske instituttet.