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Vitenskapelig artikkel

Revolusjonsåret 1917 minutt for minutt

Bokanmeldelse: I en bokhøst med flere utgivelser om revolusjonene i 1917 bidrar Per Egil Hegges bok med mange detaljer, men med lite nytt, skriver Minda Holm.

  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
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Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Russlands nye maktposisjon

Russland forsøker å markere seg i Midtøsten – også utenfor Syria. Kong Salmans første besøk til Moskva bekrefter hvor vellykket den russiske strategien er.

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Diplomati
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Midtøsten og Nord-Afrika
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Diplomati
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Midtøsten og Nord-Afrika
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Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Frykten for populismen

Det snakkes mye og negativt om populistenes fremmarsj i Europa. Men det er ofte uklart hva som menes med populisme.

  • Regional integrasjon
  • Europa
  • Nord-Amerika
  • Styring
  • EU
  • Regional integrasjon
  • Europa
  • Nord-Amerika
  • Styring
  • EU
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Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Ytre Høyre, Foren Eder!

Ytre høyre forfekter nasjonalstaten, men er stadig mer internasjonale. Båndene er særlig sterke mellom bevegelser i USA og Russland.

  • Europa
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Nord-Amerika
  • Norden
  • Styring
  • Europa
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Nord-Amerika
  • Norden
  • Styring
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
kapittel

An Asian Pivot Starts at Home: The Russian Far East in Russian Regional Policy

To realize its ambitious goals of turning the Far East into Russia’s gateway to the Asia-Pacific, the Kremlin in 2012 established the Ministry for the Development of the Far East. Structurally, this ministry is a hybrid, with offices at the federal and the regional levels, reflecting both Moscow’s centralized take on policy formulation and the difficulties of micro-managing politics in a region distant in time and space. Analysing whether the new ministry has been a success, the author concludes that, while Moscow’s primary goal has been to open a Far Eastern gateway, a side-effect might be that the Far East will become better integrated with the rest of the country, providing for more balanced development throughout the Federation.

  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
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Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Are UN Peacekeeping Missions Moving Toward "Chapter Seven and a Half Operations"?

The combined effect of the inclusion of regional ad hoc coalitions with a strong orientation towards counter-insurgency and counterterrorism is the creation of a new type of “Chapter Seven and a Half” operations. Enforcement action is delegated to regional ad hoc coalitions that have a stronger interest in the conflict and who are more willing to put troops in the line of fire. However, such a development risks undermining the legitimacy of the UN, increasing attacks against peacekeeping operations as well as other parts of the UN, and eroding its role in the mediation and humanitarian domains.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Opprørsgrupper
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Opprørsgrupper
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
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Publikasjoner
Rapport

Assessing the Effectiveness of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM)

Denne rapporten vurderer i hvilken grad den afrikanske unions fredsoperasjon i Somalia (AMISOM) har oppnådd sine nåværende strategiske mål og hvilken innvirkning, om noen, misjonen har hatt på en bredere politisk og sikkerhetsmessig dynamikk i Somalia.

  • Afrika
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • FN
  • AU
AMISOM 2018 report cover 2.png
  • Afrika
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • FN
  • AU
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Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Trump, Putin and rejected greatness

Why do Putin and Trump undermine the international consensus knowledge that their national academic and governmental milieus have been so central to building?

  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Nord-Amerika
  • Arktis
  • Klima
  • Styring
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Nord-Amerika
  • Arktis
  • Klima
  • Styring
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Publikasjoner
kapittel

'Restore Moscow to the Muscovites': Othering 'the migrants' in the 2013 Moscow mayoral elections

Today, the Russian Federation has the second largest migrant population in the world in absolute numbers. The chapter looks at what role these migrants – and migrantophobia – play in Russian contemporary identity discourse through the lens of the 2013 Moscow mayoral elections. On the eve of these elections, Muscovites identified the large numbers of labour migrants in the capital as the most important campaign issue. This chapter explores how 'the migrant issue' was addressed at the candidate level as well as how it was perceived by ordinary Muscovites. First, it traces what images of 'the migrant' the candidates presented; how they assessed the potential for integration into Russian society; and what measures they proposed for regulating the flow of new migrants. Next, drawing on survey data, the chapter discusses to what extent campaign promises reflected the positions of the electorate on the same issues. It concludes that the Moscow electoral experiment of allowing semi-competitive elections contributed to pushing the borders of what mainstream politicians in Russia perceived as acceptable positions on migrants and migration policy, for at least two reasons: Firstly, incumbent mayor Sobianin faced stiff competition from the rising star of the non-systemic opposition, liberal-nationalist Aleksei Navalnyi, and had to find a way of outbidding him on the migrant issue. Second, in this more competitive environment, Sobianin could not rely on administrative resources alone, but had to respond to popular demands, to ensure an acceptable win: therefore, he had to appear as 'tough' on migrants. The experiment with semi-competitive elections in Moscow in 2013 thus demonstrated the limits of the Kremlin’s ability to fully control Russian nationalist discourse and also contributed to reinforcing the idea of 'the migrant' as the new 'Other' in Russian identity discourse.

  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
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Publikasjoner
kapittel

Introduction: Exploring Russian nationalisms

In the introductory chapter, the two editors, Pål Kolstø and Helge Blakkisrud, argue that in Putin's third period as president, nationalism has become even more important for understanding Russian politics and society than before. Prior to the annexation of Crimea, the influx of low-skilled labour from Central Asia and the Caucasus had been creating strong migrantophobic sentiments in sectors of the Russian population, boosting support for ethno-nationalism. The dramatic events in Ukraine in 2014 onwards, however, radically changed the political scene in Russia. Nationalist movements in opposition to the Kremlin went into steep decline, while the nation rallied around its leader, President Putin, who for the first time explicitly used nationalist themes in his propaganda. At first glance, this development may appear radically new. However, our introductory chapter, drawing on insights from several of the chapters in the volume, shows how this pattern has precedents in Russian history: Russian state authorities have generally tended to use other methods of legitimation than nationalism, leaving the nationalist field to various societal forces. However, in times of crisis – as during the Great Patriotic War– a state-focused, imperialistic nationalism is fully exploited as a mobilising device, and any autonomous, popular expressions of nationalism are suppressed. Seemingly an oxymoron, 'imperialist nationalism' has in fact been a strong current throughout Russian history, competing with cultural and ethnic nationalism.

  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
  • Russland og Eurasia
  • Styring
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