In this REGROUP Research Paper Christopher Lord, John Erik Fossum, and Arto Väisänen provides a framework for analysing multi-level emergency governance employed during the pandemic.
Publications - Page 3
In a new, co-authored article in Stat og Styring, Morten Egeberg argues that working from home significantly reduces access to work-relevant information.
In this report, Tiziano Zgaga, Andrea Capati and Dora Hegedus, examine patterns of dominance surrounding the European Council, during three recent crisis.
Chris Lord has contributed a chapter to the newly published book Sovereignty in Conflict. Political, Constitutional and Economic Dilemmas in the EU.
Jarle Trondal has published a new book, examining the transformation of the administrative state.
In this report, Magdalena Góra, Elodie Thevenin and Katarzyna Zielińska (eds), together with contributing researchers, examine what political actors say about the future of the European Union.
Jarle Trondal has published a new co-authored textbook for first year students studying the EU (in Norwegian).
In this report, Mona Marie Frank examines the social imaginaries and bio-political goals which informed the creation of Norwegian integration policies and the ways in which street-level bureaucrats implement these policies in day-to-day practices on the ground.
In a new article in Public Administration, Jarle Trondal shows how stability serves as an enduring feature of public governance and how this is anchored in the organizational architecture of government systems.
In a new, co-authored article in the Journal of European Public Policy, Daniel Naurin suggests that interest groups have the potential to supplement multidimensional gaps in representation between the political party system and citizen preferences.
In a new article in the Journal of Common Market Studies, Martin Moland shows that exclusively national citizens are most likely to support differentiated integration that allows for greater national autonomy.
In a new, co-authored article in Ethnicities, John Erik Fossum shows the potentials (and pitfalls) in Europe's multilevel governing complex.
In a new, co-authored article in the International Review of Administrative Sciences, Jarle Trondal suggests that the framing of European Union artificial intelligence policies is filtered through organizational structures among states.