En ny internasjonal orden?
Internasjonal politikk er i en overgangstid, fra én internasjonal orden til noe annet vi ikke kjenner. Det er en turbulent, uforutsigbar og farlig tid, skriver Sverre Lodgaard i Klassekampen.
I Nav-saken ble «handlingsrom» negativt, i Fellesforbund-saken positivt
Hvor mye handlingsrom vil vi egentlig ha i EØS-avtalen? spør NUPI-direktør Ulf Sverdrup i denne DN-kronikken.
Frukostseminar: 25 år med EØS-avtalen
Kva betydning har EØS-avtalen hatt for Noreg etter 25 år? Kva utfordringar og moglegheiter ligg i avtalen? Bli med når vi lanserer ny fokusspalte i tidsskriftet Internasjonal Politikk den 22. november!
Governing complexity in the Arctic region
This book argues that confining our understandings of Arctic governance to Arctic states and a focus on the Arctic Council as the primary site of circumpolar governance provides an incomplete picture. Instead, the authors embrace the complexity of governance in the Arctic by systematically analyzing and comparing the position, interventions, and influence of different actor groups seeking to shape Arctic political and economic outcomes in multiple sites of Arctic politics, both formal and informal. This book assesses the potential that sub-national governments, corporations, civil society organizations, Indigenous peoples, and non-Arctic states possess to develop norms and standards to ensure a stable, rule-based Arctic region.
The GeGaLo index: Geopolitical gains and losses after energy transition
This article presents the GeGaLo index of geopolitical gains and losses that 156 countries may experience after a full-scale transition to renewable energy. The following indicators are considered for inclusion in the index: fossil fuel production, fossil fuel reserves, renewable energy resources, governance, and conflict. Some of these represent potential gains; some represent losses; and some the capacity of countries to handle changes in geopolitical strength. Five alternative versions of the index are developed to work out the optimal design. First, the energy resource indicators are combined with equal weights to create two simple versions of the index. Next, governance and conflict indicators are included to create three more complex versions of the index. The index provides useful pointers for strategic energy and foreign policy choices: geopolitical power will be more evenly distributed after an energy transition; Iceland will gain most; Russia may be one of the main holders of stranded geopolitical assets; China and the USA will lose more geopolitically than foreseen by other analyses. The index also indicates a lack of emphasis in parts of the literature on space for renewable energy infrastructure and on domestically sourced coal for the current strength of countries such as China and the United States.
AVLYST: Frukostseminar: Europa i 2020 sett frå Finland
På grunn av uventa hendingar er dette seminaret dessverre avlyst.
MENINGER: En gylden mulighet for skatteetikk
Oljefondets etiske retningslinjer er oppe til vurdering. Et nytt «skatteunndragelsespunkt» må med i uttrekkskriteriene.
Teoriseminar: «Tradisjonelle» institusjonar og statsbygging i Tsjetsjenia og Ingusjetia
Ekaterina Sokirianskaia presenterer bokprosjektet sitt om situasjonen i Nord-Kaukasus.
The Political Economy of Policy Vacuums: The European Commission on Demographic Change
Supranational organisations can only confront politico-economic issues that are recognised as important. Typically, issues gain recognition either when they provide an external shock to the system, shaking political actors into action, or when they are framed as important in policy networks concerned with developing the appropriate scientific approach. Ideally political and scientific actors align in creating pressures to recognise the issue as salient and to mobilise organisational responses. Issues differ in their capacity to be driven by both political and scientific pressures, creating crisis management, technocratic, and reform agenda outcomes. Here we explore a further variation, where pressures around an issue are insufficient, creating a policy vacuum. We examine one such policy vacuum in Europe: demographic change. This issue belongs to no particular Directorate-General in the European Commission, but is subject to policy frames from DG EMPL and DG ECFIN. Without sufficient political and scientific pressures, no particular policy position is occupied and advocated despite recognition of the issue’s importance. We discuss the role of policy vacuums and the need for their identification in political economy research.