Conferences - Page 2
In Oslo on 18 and 19 May, this conference discussed the current internal dynamics in the EU, the different models of partnership with the EU and the future of Norway-EU relations.
The Department of Economics is organizing a workshop in honor of Michael Hoel's 70th anniversary and his long-standing scientific contributions and services to the University of Oslo.
On Tuesday 4 April Professor Bo Stråth and Professor Hans-Jörg Trenz will present main conclusions from their newly published books on Europe's past and present.
Guri Rosén organises a workshop that aims to analyse how the processes of parliamentarisation and politicization affect the EU's external relations.
A workshop on the GLOBUS project's theoretical framework and its application to the project's research fields will be staged in Oslo on 19-20 January 2017.
On 13 January 2017 Agustín J. Menéndez and Espen D. H. Olsen convened a workshop on European citizenship in light of the refugee crisis.
Welcome to the Department’s 1st Annual Research Conference!
On 24-25 November John Erik Fossum and Jozef Bátora hosted the workshop 'The EU and its crises: From resilient ambiguity to ambiguous resilience - or beyond?' at ARENA.
What is an emotion and how can it be measured? How does emotional understanding develop in children and what connection is there between hedonistic feelings and the brain? What is our emotional responses to music and why does culture hold a vital role in the study of emotion?
The Department of Economics is co-organizer of the 20th Annual Conference on Real Options.
The second day of the GLOBUS kick-off conference will allow for project discussions in plenary as well as parallel sessions. Please note that this day is devoted to internal sessions and is not open to the public.
Since its inception the EU has proclaimed an ambition to promote justice at the global level. But what precisely is the EU’s contribution to global justice? And what would a just foreign policy look like? The kick-off conference of the GLOBUS project will be held in Oslo on 9-10 June 2016.
The workshop is organized to celebrate professor Rødseth’s scientific contributions, scholarship and long term services to the University of Oslo and to the Norwegian society in general. The workshop is open for all interested.
Cathrine Holst and Bo Rothstein will convene a workshop on expert rule at the 2016 ECPR Joint Sessions of Workshops in Pisa, Italy.
John Erik Fossum and Jozef Bátora organise a workshop on differentiation and democratic governance in the EU on 31 March 2016.
Together with the Centre for European Research (CERGU) at the University of Gothenburg, Guri Rosén at ARENA co-organises an interdisciplinary conference on the TTIP in Gothenburg on 14-15 March 2016. EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström will hold a keynote address.
Asimina Michailidou and Mauro Barisione organise a workshop on social media and European politics in Oslo on 10-11 March 2016.
The GINE project at the Department of Economics, University of Oslo, is organizing a workshop on Theory and Environment 3-4 March 2016. Registration is required.
ARENA organizes the first workshop of the research network TARN on the agencification of EU governance in Oslo on 1-2 February 2016.
The education and research network on EU foreign policy, ANTERO, will hold its first workshop sessions in Brussels on 9-11 December.
ARENA is among the organisers of the international conference 'Security and Governance in the Globalised Arctic: Nordic and International Perspectives' in Aarhus 12-13 November.
This workshop analyses the development of a European administrative order, including agencification. Its focus is on how that relates to and reprograms national administrative orders.
This workshop discusses the constitutional and democratic implications of developments within the domain of foreign and security policy. What, if any, is the constitutional identity of the EU in the domain of foreign and security policy? What are the democratic implications of a putative constitutionalisation of this domain?
This workshop focuses on Europe's civil society and on the implications of the crisis. A key assumption is that the crisis politicizes through redistributive conflicts and a ‘new politics of identity’. An important question that is considered is how the Europe of rights and citizenship confronts a Europe of increasing inequalities.