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NUPI skole
Hvor hender det?
Medlemslandene er uenige om hvordan FN kan bedre bli i stand til å hanskes med vår tids utfordringer.
  • Peace operations
  • Humanitarian issues
  • United Nations
Hvor hender det?
Norge forvalter store naturessurser i nord. Nordområdepolitikken må ta hensyn til bærekraftig utvikling, klimaendringer og konkurrerende lands interesser.
  • Defence
  • Foreign policy
  • The Arctic
Hvor hender det?
Norge forvalter store naturessurser i nord. Nordområdepolitikken må ta hensyn til bærekraftig utvikling, klimaendringer og konkurrerende lands interesser.
  • Defence
  • Foreign policy
  • The Arctic
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Bok

Skogan, J. K. (red.): Hva nå USA og Europa?

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

UN Reform and Collective Security : An Overview of Post-Cold War Initiatives and Proposals

«Challenges to Collective Security» Working Papers from NUPI’s UN Programme

  • Diplomati
  • FN
  • Diplomati
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

Transition Management

«Challenges to Collective Security» Working Papers from NUPI’s UN Programme: The emerging consensus on the need to establish more effective United Nations mechanisms for managing the transition from conflict to peace, and on the importance of addressing the nexus between development and security, is not sufficiently reflected in the organisational structure or logic of UN operations. This report argues that tailored policy responses should be introduced or strengthened at the institutional, intergovernmental and regional levels, to deal effectively with the challenges of peacekeeping, peace-building and transition management. The debate about the need for more improved transition management and better coordination mirrors the larger debate about the role of the organisation and UN system integration.

  • Utviklingspolitikk
  • FN
  • Utviklingspolitikk
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

International Policing and the Rule of Law in Transitions from War to Peace

«Challenges to Collective Security» Working Papers from NUPI’s UN Programme: In transitions from war to peace there are few challenges more in need of urgent attention and careful planning than the issues of policing and establishment of rule of law.1 Development efforts are futile in situations marred by violence and recurrent conflict. The nature of the institutions of law and order is central to the relationship between state and society. In order to achieve a sustainable political settlement after conflict, these institutions need to be trustworthy, effective and legitimate. Neither is sufficient on its own: a technically effective police force may be used in a way seen as illegitimate by much of the population. Likewise, a high human rights standard may not in itself ensure that the police, the judiciary and the penal system manage to reduce crime and violence to levels compatible with societal and economic progress. It is thus equally important to have institutions established that are both effective and legitimate. However, this can be a very difficult and challenging endeavour since the deliberate misuse of, or the absence of, institutions of law and order often may have contributed to the fostering of conflict in the first place. Both institutional and cultural transformation is needed to achieve lasting peace. The international community has over the last decade become increasingly aware of the need for a more integrated approach to security-sector reform. That being said, there is still a long way to go in terms of developing functional holistic approaches to such reform processes. Attempts at shortcutting the need for local ownership through «executive missions» have not proven particularly successful. Any system of law and order not rooted in society itself runs the risk of being superficial (allowing informal systems to function underneath) or temporary (as it is dependent on the continued presence of scarce foreign personnel). While situations may arise that require full-fledged international executive responsibility, the best approach lies in a careful integration of security-sector reform efforts aimed at achieving a sustainable, locally rooted rule of law. There is no alternative to a sector-wide approach in this field, and the inherently political nature of any undertaking of this sort should be recognised from the outset.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Fredsoperasjoner
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

Power, Principles and Procedures : Reinterpreting French foreign policy towards the USA (2001-2003)

French foreign policy towards the US is often understood as particularly confrontational and based on traditional power politics, or a wish to re-establish “la grandeur de la France”. This article aims at investigating the validity of this widely held view. It further seeks to provide a more comprehensive understanding of the French positions by studying the arguments used by the French political leadership and the implications of the Iraq conflict for bilateral cooperation at lower levels. This study questions the common assumption of IR theory that national identities and/or interests are fixed and independent of structural factors such as international norms and values. It also questions the value of focusing exclusively on diplomatic or “top-level” bilateral relations, without looking at “low-level” or practical bilateral cooperation and/or conflicts.

  • Diplomati
  • Diplomati
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

Indigenous to Indigenous Cooperation : Review of the Saami Council Projects in Africa

The Norwegian section of the Saami Council has been cooperating with two indigenous organizations in Africa since 2002: the Organization of Indigenous Peoples of Africa, based in Tanzania, and the First People of the Kalahari, in Botswana. The report evaluates this cooperation. It concludes that both organizations are potentially very relevant, but that for different reasons, the full potential has not been reached. Recommendations for how to strengthen the work are given.

  • Humanitære spørsmål
  • Humanitære spørsmål
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Rapport

Norway's Fredskorpset Youth Program : Study of selected exchange projects

The Fredskorpset Youth program is a North-South exchange program facilitating the exchange of young people between partner organizations or institutions of Norway and countries of the South. The present study was commissioned in order to assess the degree to which stated goals of the exchanges were realized. Four exchanges were selected to be studied: between a Norwegian and Kenyan student organization (AIESEC); between a Norwegian missionary organization (NMS) and its counterpart church in Madagascar (FLM); between local Red Cross organizations in Norway and Uganda; and between a Norwegian (VUC) and two Malawian teacher training institutions (CC, LTTC). Objectives of the programs included acquiring new knowledge, attitudes and commitment at the level of individual participants, organizational strengthening and development of international contacts at the institutional level, and dissemination of information. As goals were mostly quite loosely formulated, it was difficult to assess the degree to which they were realized with any precision. Findings varied between the exchanges, but in general individual objectives were reached to some extent, while results might have been even stronger with more systematic attention to them. Institutional goals were achieved in most of the cases. In terms of information dissemination, this could be strengthened in most of the exchange programs.

  • Utviklingspolitikk
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Utviklingspolitikk
  • Fredsoperasjoner
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