In this REGROUP Research Paper, John Erik Fossum and Christopher Lord sketches the outline of a Democratic Audit of the pandemic.
2023
Arto Väisänen has contributed a co-authored chapter to the newly published book Defending NATO's Northern Flank: Power Projection and Military Operations.
In a new IGCC working paper, Øyvind Stiansen, Daniel Naurin, Asimina Michailidou, and Adriana Riganova investigate the impact of European Union action against democratic backsliding in Poland.
In a new, co-authored policy analysis published at SIEPS, Daniel Naurin investigates what different cooperative ties different member states form with their peers in the Council and why.
In a new, co-authored article in Public Administration Review, Jarle Trondal analyzes whether and how a terror attack targeting public institutions affects civil servants in their day-to-day work.
In a new article in Tidsskrift for velferdsforskning, Andreas Eriksen and Erik Oddvar Eriksen ask what requirements good administrative practice places on the administration.
Helene Sjursen edited a Special Section in International Affairs titled 'Liberal order, the EU and global political justice'. Among the seven articles are also an article by Sjursen herself as well as Johanne Døhlie Saltnes.
In a new, article in Stat og Styring, Erik Oddvar Eriksen argues that the NAV scandal highlights the need for a governance model that accounts for several levels of governance.
John Erik Fossum, Christopher Lord, Espen D. H. Olsen, Johanne Døhlie Saltnes and Jarle Trondal have, together with co-authors, published a book examining Norway's affiliation to the EU.
In his new article in Politics and Governance, John Erik Fossum argues for the merits of seeing both the EU and Canada as different versions of a multiheaded federation.
Jarle Trondal has contributed a co-authored chapter to the newly published book The Elgar Companion to the OECD.
Nicole Ostrand has contributed a chapter to the newly published book UK Borderscapes: Sites of Enforcement and Resistance.
In their new article in Political Studies Review, Martin Moland and Asimina Michailidou test the assumption that those getting news about the European Union (EU) mostly from social media would be more sceptical of its institutions than others.
In a new, co-authored article in the Representation, Christopher Lord pays tribute to the work of David Beetham.
In a new article in the British Journal of Political Science, Trym Nohr Fjørtoft discusses the legitimacy of non-majoritarian institutions.
Chris Lord has contributed a chapter to the newly published Dilemmas of European Democracy: New Perspectives on Democratic Politics in the European Union
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.
In a new, co-authored article in Stat og Styring, Morten Egeberg argues that working from home significantly reduces access to work-relevant information.
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.
Jarle Trondal has published a new co-authored textbook for first year students studying the EU (in Norwegian).
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.