Episodios
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The Nobel Peace Prize is one of the worldâs most prestigious honors. Each year, the Director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) presents his own independent list of individuals and organizations he believes are deserving of the Prize.
This list, separate from the official selection by the Norwegian Nobel Committee, highlights those who have worked tirelessly for peace and merit special recognition.
In this episode, PRIO Director Henrik Urdal discusses the people and organizations who made it onto his list this year. He is joined by Berit Reiss-Andersen, Special Adviser to the Norwegian Red Cross and former member of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, where she served for over a decade. Also featured is Maria Ressa, the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, honored for her courageous work alongside Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov in defending freedom of expression.
PRIO's Peace in a Pod is hosted by Arnaud Siad.
Photo credit: © Nobel Prize Outreach. Photo: Geir Anders Rybakken Ărslien
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On April 29th at the World Economic Forum, Norwayâs Foreign Minister, Espen Barth Eide, delivered a striking critique of the so-called âWest,â accusing his allies of a double standard in their handling of the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza.
His remarks echoed growing criticism from the Global South, and highlighted the risk of eroding multilateral institutions and international law.
But is there truly a double standard? And what new global alliances could emerge as the United Nations struggles with paralysis?
In this episode, Stein TĂžnnesson, Research Professor Emeritus and former Director of PRIO, and GĂ©rard Araud, former French Ambassador to the UN and the United States, explore what âthe Westâ means today and how global governance might evolve in the future.
This episode is hosted by Arnaud Siad.
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More armed conflicts took place in 2023 than in any other year since the end of World War II. That is the shocking finding in this yearâs Conflict Trends Report â a yearly paper by the Peace Research Institute Oslo, using data from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program and examining global conflict trends since 1946.
In total, 59 armed conflicts raged around the world last year.
So is our world becoming more violent? What were the most violent conflicts in 2023? And are these figures a coincidence of overlapping conflicts, some extraordinarily lethal, from artillery warfare in Ukraine to the razing of Gaza?
Siri Aas Rustad is a Research Director at PRIO and the author of the Conflict Trends Report. In this episode, she is joined by Richard Gowan, the United Nations Director for the International Crisis Group, and an Associate Senior Policy Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.
PRIO's Peace in a Pod is hosted by award-winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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For decades, Norway has played a major role as a peacemaker. From the Nobel Peace Prize to the Oslo Accords, promoting peace has been a central aspect of Norwegian foreign policy.
But this is only part of the story. Few outside the country are aware of the thriving, lucrative, and government-owned weapons industry in this Scandinavian nation.
This creates a dilemma for Norway, as it walks a tightrope between economic interests and its commitments to international law.
In this episode, Nic Marsh, a Senior Researcher at PRIO and a specialist in arms trade, discusses the scope and significance of Norway's weapons industry and arms trade. He is joined by General Kristin Lund, a retired senior officer of the Norwegian Army and the first woman to command a UN peacekeeping operation.
The episode is hosted by award-winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
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As tensions continue to rise in the Middle East, two women's organizations are pushing for a return to negotiation and a permanent resolution to the conflict.
âWomen Wage Peaceâ is the largest grassroots peace movement in Israel, while its Palestinian counterpart, âWomen of the Sun,â is a Palestinian women's organization based in Bethlehem.
They are part of a global movement to ensure women are not just represented, but also at the leadership table in peace negotiations.
Their work is supported by research showing that involving women significantly increases the chances of achieving enduring peace agreements.
In this episode, Xanthe Scharff, a gender expert, writer, and co-founder of The Fuller Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to groundbreaking reporting on women, tells us about her reporting on these two womenâs organizations.
She is followed by Torunn L. Tryggestad, PRIOâs Deputy Director who heads its Centre on Gender, Peace, and Security, and Professor Azza Karam, a specialist in religion and development, and the keynote speaker at this yearâs UN High-Level Seminar on Gender and Inclusive Mediation Processes, held in Oslo.
PRIOâs "Peace in a Pod" is hosted by award-winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
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As Russians headed to the polls this month, the reelection of Russian President Vladimir Putin was not in doubt.
On March 17th, with over 87% of the votes in his favor, Putin secured a fifth term, becoming the longest-serving leader of the Federation since Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. With most opposition candidates either dead, jailed, exiled, or barred from running, the path was clear, with no credible challenger to his rule.
Echoing this landslide victory, polls in Russia seem to indicate Putin enjoys real domestic support, with 86% approving of the President, according to the Levada Centre, a respected Russian pollster.
So beyond these official figures, what do Russians really make of their leader? And is support for the war in Ukraine as strong as the Kremlin claims?
In this episode, we talk to Aleksei Miniailo, a political activist in Moscow, who started a project with social scientists and analysts to find out how the war with Ukraine is really being perceived in Russia. Pavel Baev, a Research professor at PRIO and an expert on Russian foreign policy, also joins the conversation.
PRIO's Peace in a Pod is hosted by award-winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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UNRWA is in trouble. The UN agency for Palestine Refugees is accused by Israel of being infiltrated by Hamas and having had some of its staff involved in the attacks on October 7th.
Nearly 2 million people in Gaza depend on UNRWA for survival as war and displacement continue after nearly four months of war.
The allegations by Israel concern a fraction of the workforce in Gaza, but are having devastating consequences for the organization, threatening its very existence.
While an investigation into Israelâs claims is ongoing, the United States, Germany and Sweden â the largest individual donors to UNRWA - have all paused their funding, and the European Union is wavering over what to do. However, Norway, one of the largest donors to UNRWA, says it will continue its funding.
In this episode, UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini, Norwegian State Secretary Andreas Motzfeldt Kravik, and JĂžrgen Jensehaugen, a PRIO expert on the Arab-Israeli conflict, discuss why the organization matters more now than ever.
The episode is hosted by Arnaud Siad.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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From war-torn Ukraine and Sudan to the Mediterranean, 2023 marked yet another year where thousands were forced to leave their homes in pursuit of a better life.
In one of the deadliest migrant boat tragedies, more than 600 people drowned on June 14 off the coast of Greece, after a fishing vessel known as the Adriana capsized and sank. A few months later, the minuscule Italian island of Lampedusa saw an influx of 10,000 individuals within days, which nearly doubled the local population. It created new urgent humanitarian needs, on an island that has already welcomed and seen thousands pass through over the years, while again fuelling a narrative by fringe political parties of an "invasion."
But beyond the gripping headlines, what were some of the key migration trends that defined 2023? What realities do those embarking on the journey to Europe face? And amidst the turmoil, are European initiatives aimed at curbing migration proving effective, and at what moral and financial costs?
In this episode, we hear from Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert, a Senior Researcher at PRIO and an expert on migration and humanitarian issues. She is joined by Nima Elbagir, CNN's multi-award-winning Chief International Investigative Correspondent, who just returned from an assignment in the West Bank. Nima is in Oslo to deliver PRIOâs Annual Peace Address.
This episode is hosted by Emmy-award winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
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On November 15th, Israeli forces stormed al-Shifa Hospital, the largest medical complex in the Gaza Strip, in search of a Hamas base.
The facility sheltered hundreds of people: wounded civilians, children, and newborns. Soon after, the World Health Organization labeled the hospital a "death zone."
Healthcare facilities enjoy special protections under international law. However, from Gaza to Ukraine, and in many other places, evidence suggests that hospitals are routinely viewed as mere military targets.
So, how does international law safeguard healthcare facilities, and why is it often insufficient to protect hospitals and healthcare workers?
Larissa Fast, a PRIO Global Fellow and Professor of Humanitarian and Conflict Studies at the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute, University of Manchester, joins this episode as the Principal Investigator on the project 'Researching the Impact of Attacks on Healthcare.' She is accompanied by Tobias Köhler, a specialist in international humanitarian law with the Norwegian Red Cross, who has served in legal and protection roles for the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Norwegian Refugee Council.
This episode is hosted by Emmy Award-winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
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On November 15th, the world watched as a highly anticipated meeting between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and US President Joe Biden took place amid the scenic backdrop of Woodside, California.
From a controversial visit by a US House Speaker to Taiwan, to a Chinese spy balloon crossing the United States â the two countriesâ relations have sunk to their lowest point in decades.
And from the war in Ukraine to the conflict opposing Israel and the Palestinians, and a general election in Taiwan that could decide the fate not just of the island, but the entire region â a more assertive Beijing may be attempting to redefine the rules of the game.
As the country marks the end of its presidency of the UN Security Council this November, we ask a simple question: what does China want?
Ilaria Carrozza is a Senior Researcher at PRIO and an expert on Chinese foreign policy. She is joined from Beijing by Zichen Wang, a Chinese public intellectual with the Center for China and Globalization, and the founder and editor of newsletter Pekingnology.
This episode is hosted by Emmy-award winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In the early hours of October 7, Palestinian militants with Hamas, the Islamic group that controls the Gaza Strip, mounted a stunning and highly coordinated invasion of Israel.
They rampaged through Israeli towns, killing people in their homes, attacking young rave-goers, and taking some 200 hostages.
The attacks by Hamas were horrific and gruesome, some of them live-streamed on social media for maximum impact.
These were soon followed by Israel declaring war on Gaza, announcing a complete siege and starting a relentless campaign of bombardments that has killed thousands of civilians, flattened entire neighbourhoods and unleashed a humanitarian catastrophe.
Western leaders were quick to respond to the attacks by Hamas with France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States issuing a joint statement, expressing their "steadfast and united support to Israelâ and vowing to âsupport the country in its efforts to defend itself.â
But beyond the unified front, a number of Western countries are voicing concerns about giving Israel carte blanche in Gaza, while UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres calls for a ceasefire.
PRIO Senior Researcher JĂžrgen Jensehaugen, a specialist on the Arab-Israeli conflict and Jan Egeland, Secretary-General of the Norwegian Refugee Council who has teams on the ground in Gaza, discuss the Westâs response to the conflict, and what the situation is like for the millions of Palestinians there.
PRIO's Peace in a Pod is hosted by Emmy-award winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
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In the early hours of October 7, a powerful earthquake shook Herat province in western Afghanistan. It was followed by multiple aftershocks and a second, strong earthquake on October 11.
Entire villages across western Afghanistan have been destroyed and over a thousand people lost their lives. And out of the rubble and dust has emerged a shocking statistic: according to the United Nations, women and children make up the vast majority of the dead and injured.
To understand why, a new report co-published by the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security and the Peace Research Institute Oslo, sheds light on the plight of Afghan women.
Launched on October 24, the âWomen, Peace and Security Indexâ measures womenâs inclusion, justice and security in 177 countries, covering over 99% of the worldâs population. The report provides alarming figures for Afghanistan, where women are being erased from public life, and ranks the country last on its global index.
In this episode of PRIO's Peace in a Pod, Torunn Tryggestad, PRIOâs Deputy Director and head of its Centre for Gender, Peace and Security, presents some of the Index's findings. She is joined by Fawzia Koofi, former deputy speaker of the Afghan Parliament, the first woman to hold that role, and one of the rare women to have sat at the negotiating table with the Taliban in 2021. She is also the author of a memoir, âThe Favored Daughter.â
PRIO's Peace in a Pod is hosted by Emmy-award winning journalist Arnaud Siad.
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The announcement by the Norwegian Nobel Committee on the Peace Prize is an event highly anticipated each year by millions around the world.
Itâs easy to see why: the names of previous Nobel Peace Prize recipients include the likes of Malala Yousafzai, President Barack Obama, Nelson Mandela, and the 14th Dalai Lama.
So who will be the winner this year? And what impact can it have on those who are receiving the Prize?
351 candidates were nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2023, according to the Nobel committee â the second highest number ever. And this time, all bets are on figures such as Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, or Uyghur scholar Ilham Toti, also serving a prison sentence, in China.
But Henrik Urdal, Director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo, sees it differently. As is an annual tradition at PRIO, he has published his shortlist of who should get the Prize, with a focus on human rights defenders and activists.
Although PRIO is not part of the Nobel Committee and does not officially nominate laureates â its shortlist is independent, research-based, and widely respected.
Henrik joins host Arnaud Siad alongside David Beasley â the former Executive Director of the United Nations World Food Programme, who accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the organization in 2020.
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Eighteen months since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his troops to invade Ukraine. US officials now report that the total number of troops from both sides killed or wounded since the war began is nearing half a million. A staggering toll, most of it paid by Russian troops, which outnumber Ukrainians almost three to one.
Boosted by billions of dollars of military aid and state-of-the-art weaponry from its Western allies, Ukrainians have embarked on a counteroffensive aiming at regaining control of occupied territories in the East. But hundreds of kilometres of mined terrain and fortified defence lines by the Russians have crushed hopes of a swift and decisive breakthrough.
And yet, beyond the frontlines, an extraordinary summer in Russia has unfolded, with a mutiny that saw Wagner troops marching towards Moscow â and Putin promising fire and fury on those he called "traitors."
So what is really happening in the trenches of Ukraine? And is Vladimir Putinâs leadership increasingly under threat?
In this episode, joining host Arnaud Siad in Oslo is Pavel Baev, a Research Professor at PRIO and a frequent contributor to Eurasia Daily Monitor and The Jamestown Foundation.
Joining from Moscow is Nina Kruscheva, a historian and professor of International Affairs at The New School in New York, and great granddaughter of the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
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A year ago, in the early hours of June 25, a gunman opened fire at three locations in the centre of Oslo, including at the London Pub, a longstanding fixture of the LGBTQ+ scene in the Norwegian capital.
Espen Aleksander Evjenth was there dancing with his partner and his friends, when a bullet hit his head. Despite his severe wound, he miraculously survived.
Police later announced that they viewed the shooting as a terrorist attack, and Oslo Pride organisers cancelled the parade due to take place that same day.
Espen's story is one of courage and resilience in the face of unfathomable terror and violence. In this episode, he sits down with host Arnaud Siad to share his story.
For Norway, this was the latest in a series of attacks that have shaken a nation that traditionally sees itself as a bastion of peace and stability. From the July 22, 2011 horrific attacks in Oslo and UtĂžya, to more recent ones in BĂŠrum and Kongsberg, acts of terror in Norway have led to some serious soul-searching â and a reflection on how those ultimately impact laws and society as a whole.
Kristin Bergtora Sandvik is a research professor at PRIO and a legal scholar at the University of Oslo. She is part of the LAW22JULY: RIPPLES project, a joint initiative by PRIO and the University of Oslo, that looks at the role of legal responses in rebuilding and strengthening societies after extremist attacks.
In this episode, she explains how Norwegian society is responding to terrorism.
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On Sunday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan has extended his rule into a third decade, beating his rival Kemal KılıçdaroÄlu in a bitter presidential race.
The run-off victory caps an extraordinary campaign for ErdoÄan who had hoped for a swift win. However, sky-rocketing inflation, a devastating earthquake and a united opposition left him vulnerable at the ballot box.
For two decades, ErdoÄan has loomed large over Turkish politics, gradually concentrating powers and cracking down on his political opponents and critics. Abroad, the election was closely followed by Turkeyâs NATO allies, and in Moscow, where the Turkish president maintains close ties with Russiaâs Vladimir Putin.
So what does ErdoÄanâs victory mean for Turks and for the countryâs foreign policy?
In this episode of PRIOâs Peace in a Pod, host Arnaud Siad talks to PRIO Senior Researcher Pinar Tank, a specialist of Turkish domestic and foreign policy. They are joined by Ilhan Uzgel, a professor of International Relations formerly at Ankara University, who lost his academic position after being dismissed by a presidential decree in 2017.
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On April 15th, explosions and gunfire began to rock the Sudanese capital of Khartoum, with the paramilitaries and army accusing each other of attacking their respective bases.
With two heavily armed groups squaring off in one of the most populated cities on the African continent, the United Nations has now issued a stark warning that the humanitarian situation on the ground is reaching a âbreaking point."
Katarzyna Grabskaâor Kasia as she's known by her colleaguesâis one of thousands of people who were evacuated aboard a rescue flight just a few days ago, scrambling for safety amid rapidly escalating violence. She is a Senior Researcher at PRIO, an anthropologist who researches issues of artistic practice in the context of war, gender, youth, issues of displacement and refugees, with a focus on Sudan.
On this special episode of PRIO's Peace in a Pod, we catch up with Kasia about her witnessing of the war, and her telling of how she escaped Sudan, a place she calls home.
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On April 25th, Israel marks 75 years of existence, commemorating the Declaration of Independence of 1948. But this year, amid the fireworks, military parades and flag-waving, the government of Benjamin Netanyahu will be on the lookout for disruptions and more protests.
Recent proposals by Netanyahu's government - the most far-right in the history of the country - to weaken the Supreme Court has sent hundreds of thousands of protestors to the streets. Meanwhile, illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank continue to spread, with the open support of members of the government, including controversial figures such as Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
So, is Israel's democracy at risk? And in this context, what future is there for Palestinians and Israeli Arabs?
Hilde Henriksen Waage, professor of History at the University of Oslo, and research professor at PRIO. She has worked extensively on the role of Norway in the Oslo Accords and is a published author on the topic. JĂžrgen Jensehaugen is Senior Researcher at PRIO, and author of the book âArab-Israeli Diplomacy Under Carter."
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Disarmament, i.e. the collection of arms and ammunitions following civil wars, is aimed at preventing conflict recurrence and paving the way for peace. However, comprehensive disarmament of non-state actors is challenging and rare. In this episode, we look at the following questions: What is the relationship between disarmament of rebel groups and peace? What is 'criminalized peace' and how can we prevent it? What are the roles of women in arms control initiatives?
The episode features the first female mediator who signed a peace agreement with a rebel group (Miriam Coronel-Ferrer), an expert on arms control and violence reduction (Guy Lamb) and a PRIO Senior Researcher who works on trade and trafficking of small arms and light weapons, homicide, and armed violence (Nicholas Marsh).
The episode is hosted by PRIO Senior Researcher JĂșlia Palik.
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Research is only valid and useful so long as the people doing it are honest. However, there many incentives for researchers to lie. This discussion looks at the following questions: What is academic fraud? How prevalent is it? What can be done to prevent fraud?
It features a prominent investigator of academic fraud (Nick Brown), a researcher who has studied academic publishing (Lynn Parker Nygaard) and a deputy editor of a prominent journal (Sebastian Schutte).
This bonus episode is hosted by PRIO Senior Researcher Nicholas Marsh.Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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