Forsker
Kristin Haugevik
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Sammendrag
Kristin Haugevik er forsker 1 og forskningssjef på NUPI. Haugevik har doktorgrad i statsvitenskap fra Universitetet i Oslo (2014). På NUPI jobber hun særlig med internasjonalt diplomati, mellomstatlig samarbeid, europeiske og transatlantiske relasjoner og norsk, nordisk og britisk utenriks- og sikkerhetspolitikk.
Utvalgte vitenskapelige publikasjoner:
- 2024: From the incoming editors: A leading International Relations journal with a Nordic touch. Cooperation and Conflict, 59 (2), ss. 131-134 (m/ Benjamin de Carvalho, Paul Beaumont & Øyvind Svendsen).
- 2024: Friendship in World Politics. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies. Oxford University Press.
- 2023: On Safer Ground? The emergence and evolution of ‘Global Britain’, International Affairs, 99 (6), ss. 2387–2404 (m/ Øyvind Svendsen).
- 2022: United clubs of Europe: Informal differentiation and the social ordering of intra-EU diplomacy. Cooperation and Conflict (Online First).
- 2021: Reputation Crisis Management and the State: Theorising Containment as Diplomatic Mode (m/Cecilie Basberg Neumann). European Journal of International Relations, 27 (3), 708-729.
- 2020: The Nordic Balance Revisited: Differentiation and the Foreign Policy Repertoires of the Nordic States (m/Ole Jacob Sending). Politics and Governance, 8 (4), 441-450.
- 2020: Staten, barnevernet og utenrikspolitikken. Fra indre anliggende til internasjonal konfliktsone (m/Cecilie Basberg Neumann) Nytt Norsk Tidsskrift 37 (1), 5-18.
- 2019: Kith, kin and inter-state relations: International politics as family life. I Haugevik, Kristin & Iver B. Neumann (Eds) Kinship in International Relations. Routledge.
- 2019: Kinship in International Relations: Introduction and framework. I Haugevik, Kristin & Iver B. Neumann (Eds) Kinship in International Relations. Routledge (m/Iver B. Neumann & Jon Harald Sande Lie)
- 2018: Special Relationships in World Politics: Inter-State Friendship and Diplomacy After the Second World War (monografi). Routledge.
- 2018: Parental Child Abduction and the State: Identity, Diplomacy and the Duty of Care, The Hague Journal of Diplomacy, 13, 1-21.
- 2017: Diplomacy through the back door: Norway and the bilateral route to EU decision-making. Global Affairs, 3(3), 277-291.
- 2017: Autonomy or integration? Small-state responses to a changing European security landscape. Global Affairs, 3(3), 211-221 (med Pernille Rieker).
Fullstending publikasjonsliste her.
Ekspertise
Utdanning
2023 Professorkompetanse, NUPI
2014 PhD, statsvitenskap, Universitetet i Oslo
2005 Master, statsvitenskap, Universitetet i Oslo
Arbeidserfaring
2024 - Forskningssjef, NUPI
2023 - Forsker 1, NUPI
2023 - Redaktør, Cooperation and Conflict
2018-2022 Forskningsgruppeleder, NUPI
2014-2024 Seniorforsker, NUPI
2012-2016 Redaktør, Tidsskriftet Internasjonal Politikk
2006 - 2014 Forsker/doktorgradsstipendiat, NUPI
2005 Vitenskapelig assistent, NUPI
2005 Praktikant, Norges ambassade i Washington D.C.
Aktivitet
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Tøm alle filtreDiplomacy through the back door: Norway and the bilateral route to EU decision-making
This article examines how Norway, a veteran EU outsider by choice, works on a day-to-day basis to compensate for its lack of formal voice in EU institutions. After Norwegian voters' second rejection of EU membership in a national referendum in 1994, Prime Minister Brundtland observed that Norway now must be prepared to use “the back door” to reach EU policy-makers. I suggest that for Norway, a key alternative route to the EU decision-making table has gone through bilateral partnerships. I identify two chief variants of this bilateral trajectory, what I term long-term and rotating bilateralism. Firstly, Norway has pursued long-term ties with selected bilateral partners within the EU system. Secondly, it has systematically strengthened its diplomatic presence in the member state holding or about to take over the rotating presidency of the EU Council. I conclude with some reflections on the relevance of Norway's “bilateral experience” for Britain, as a future EU outsider.
Autonomy or integration? Small-state responses to a changing European security landscape
Is there a pattern in how small European states, inside and outside of the EU, adapt and adjust to EU foreign and security policy? This article introduces a Forum in Global Affairs, discussing how small states are responding to a changing European security landscape. We assess selected European small states’ room for manoeuvre within various fields under the EU external action, and within EU institutional structures more broadly – as part of everyday diplomatic interactions in Brussels and in the context of the rotating EU presidency. As the European integration process enters a new phase, possibly marked by a trend of more differentiated integration and flexibility of individual attachments, small states will continue to face the choice between formal autonomy and integration, and between de facto hesitance and adaptability. With Brexit, the remaining large member states may become more influential, but small states will collectively have a majority of the votes and total population. Perhaps the coming era of European integration will become the era of small states?
Brexit-forhandlingene vakler videre
Det norske mediebildet har de siste ukene vært dominert av stortingsvalget. Ikke uventet har debattene handlet mest om hjemlige forhold, men mange har også etterlyst mer fokus rundt utenrikspolitiske spørsmål – i en tid hvor langvarige samarbeidsmønstre og maktkonstellasjoner ser ut til å være i endring. Norske velgere oppgir også å være noe mer opptatt av utenrikspolitikk enn før. Hva skjer med verden utenfor, og hvordan påvirker det norsk utenrikspolitikk og Norges rolle internasjonalt?
Nordiske svar på geopolitiske utfordringer (GEONOR)
Hvilke utenrikspolitiske verktøy har de nordiske lands regjeringer, når de nå står overfor en ny og mer utfordrende geopolitisk situasjon? ...
Norsk utenrikspolitikk begynner i Europa: arven etter Brende i europapolitikken