Norway – Global Forum http://peace.augsburg.edu Thu, 18 Jul 2019 17:51:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.13 http://peace.augsburg.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/cropped-Augsburg_A_2-color-32x32.png Norway – Global Forum http://peace.augsburg.edu 32 32 Watch the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony, featuring ICAN http://peace.augsburg.edu/watch-2017-nobel-peace-prize-award-ceremony-sunday-december-10-2017/ Mon, 26 Feb 2018 16:54:30 +0000 http://peace.augsburg.edu/?p=8036 The 2017 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) “for its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for ...

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The 2017 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) “for its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition on such weapons,” according to the Norwegian Nobel Committee announcement on October 6, 2017.

2017 Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony

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Nuclear Disarmament and the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony http://peace.augsburg.edu/2017-nobel-peace-prize-award-ceremony/ Sun, 10 Dec 2017 21:11:38 +0000 http://peace.augsburg.edu/?p=7967 Reflections from Program Director, Joe Underhill, in Oslo December 10, 2017. The 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony in Oslo celebrated the work of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, ...

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Reflections from Program Director, Joe Underhill, in Oslo December 10, 2017.

Oslo City Hall
The City Hall fills for the Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony

The 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony in Oslo celebrated the work of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, the twelfth group or individual to be so awarded for work on the nuclear weapons issue.  Their ambitious goal is to rid the world of nuclear weapons and they were a key player in the UN’s recent passage of the Treaty to Prohibit Nuclear Weapons.  The award raises the eternal question about human progress, the prospects for peace, and the very fate of humanity on the planet.  In a period of time when political and cultural shifts seem particularly momentous, it is appropriate to ask if there is hope to escape from the dreadful shadow of nuclear weapons, which has loomed over us all since 1945.  Social and political and economic systems seem very stable and timeless and immutable, until they aren’t.  The Soviet Union was a superpower until one day it disappeared.  Authoritarian governments in the Arab world seemed fixed in stone, until they collapsed in the Arab Spring.  Gay marriage was socially unacceptable until suddenly it was not.  These shifts in social norms are hard to predict, but Beatrice Fihn, in her mid-thirties, speaks of and for a new generation of young leaders who do not see the need, wisdom, or certainly the morality of these weapons of mass destruction.

Her Nobel Lecture, delivered along with the Hiroshima survivor Setsuko Thurlow, was a rousing call to action to rid the world of nuclear weapons, warning that we are “one tantrum away” from a potential nuclear strike.  The nuclear story will end some day, she warned, with either the end of these weapons or the end of us.  It is more complicated than that, since even without the weapons, our knowledge of how to make them will always be with us, and even with the most primitive weapons, humans can wreck unimaginable horrors (it just takes longer to do them).  A full legal ban would not guarantee that some rogue nation did not possess a well-hidden stash of the weapons, or that a new international crisis would not prompt a chaotic scramble to re-acquire the weapons.  But there is little doubt that we should move toward a world free of these weapons or at a minimum, far fewer than we currently have. Though never perfectly safe, such a world would be immeasurably safer than the one we are in now.  Exactly what kind of military policies and goals we should pursue, and how to move toward them, will be part of the nuclear security dialogue sessions this coming May and June, co-sponsored by the Nobel Peace Prize Forum and the Foreign Policy Association, and funded by the Carnegie Corporation. We look forward to sharing the results and insights from those discussions at the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize Forum in Minneapolis on September 14-15th.

Although this goal of a nuclear-free world might seem Quixotic, we have seen dramatic progress over the last thirty years, as the graphic below demonstrates.

A timeline compiled by Hans Kristensen and Robert Norris of the Federation of American Scientists.

Over the course of the last 70 years we have seen first terrifying increases, and then dramatic decreases in the number of nuclear weapons deployed around the globe since they reached the insane peak of over 64,000 such weapons in the late 1980s.  We are now at slightly less than 10,000, which is still much too high, but less than one-sixth of the previous level.  This is huge progress, for which we should be glad and on which we can keep building, even if the prospects for great power diplomacy on that front appear dim in the next few years.  The priority in the short term will be to keep the pressure on and prepare the foundation for the next round of U.S.-Russia arms reductions talks once there is leadership that is more open to this way of thinking in Moscow and Washington.

In the remarks delivered by the laureates, and the Chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, there were frequent appeals to the nuclear powers and their allies to sign the nuclear ban treaty.  So far 54 countries have signed it, and only three have ratified.  Interestingly, Norway itself has not signed the Nuclear Ban treaty, even though it was one of the original proponents of the “Humanitarian Pledge” and nuclear disarmament efforts that led up to the UN Nuclear Ban Treaty’s passage in the UN this July.  But as part of NATO and a close ally of the U.S., Norway has chosen now to support the “nuclear umbrella” concept whereby it gains some level of the security afforded by an extension of the U.S. nuclear deterrent. The current Norwegian government has taken a more hawkish stance on the world stage, recently purchasing 52 F-35 fighter jets from the U.S., at a cost of $8.4 Billion. The increased tensions with Russia are fueling concerns about potential Russian expansion of its sphere of influence into the Baltic region.  Having once been invaded and occupied by Nazi Germany, Norway remains uneasy about letting its guard down too much.

The Norwegian Foreign Minister,in opposition to the Nobel Committee’s decision, did not attend the award award ceremony, but the current Conservative Prime Minister Erna Solberg was there, and the camera panned to her repeatedly when the calls were made for countries to support the nuclear ban treaty.  In its choice of Peace Prize laureates, the Nobel Committee sometimes directs its message at their own government, and in this case to all the nuclear states as well.  Will they listen?  Beatrice Fihn met with Prime Minister Sohlberg on December 11th, but there was no big announcement of a sudden change of heart. B ig changes do not appear imminent, but, as we have seen, it is always difficult to predict when big changes in policy and values will happen.

The presence in Oslo City Hall of some of the hibakusha, the Japanese survivors of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was powerful.  For them, the change cannot come soon enough.  It is almost unimaginable to think of what they went through.  Humans are capable of unspeakable cruelty, short-sightedness, and violence.  But we also sometimes get it right. In spaces like the General Assembly Hall of the United Nations, and in City Hall in Oslo on December 10th each year, we participate in part of building a better future, one built on kindness, patience, and hundreds of years of hard-fought wisdom. Hundreds of years from now I think people will look back and see these efforts as laying the groundwork for a more peaceful and just society and world order.  The pompous posturing and petty political dynamics that seem to so preoccupy us these days will be forgotten, or viewed with a certain bemused puzzlement by future generations (who will almost certainly still have to deal with whatever future version of that political pettiness still exists).  But I am confident they will admire the efforts of all those people, like the grassroots organizers of ICAN, and the wise, patient, and long-sighted diplomats working to address the challenges of climate change and nuclear threats, and be grateful for their tireless efforts to bequeath to future generations a more peaceful, just, and sustainable world.

People are tired of war and injustice, and ready to do the hard work of slowly and patiently addressing the big challenges we face. I am confident that the visions forwarded by the Nobel Peace Prize laureates are the future, not the kind of selfish, fearful, and violent behavior that is so often in the headlines. These kinds of venal behaviors, these aspects of human nature, will remain with us undoubtedly. But they will be countered by the institutions and frameworks and values being developed and strengthened in places like the UN and celebrated by the Norwegian Nobel Committee.  We all look forward to being part of those efforts in the months, years, and decades ahead.

The torchlight parade in front of the Grand Hotel in Oslo on the evening of December 10th, the crowd celebrating ICAN, and chanting, “Yes, I Can!”

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High-level Dialogue Sessions on Nuclear Security http://peace.augsburg.edu/high-level-dialogue-sessions-nuclear-security/ Fri, 23 Jun 2017 20:02:29 +0000 http://peace.augsburg.edu/?p=7005 This year, in addition to putting together the program for this September’s Nobel Peace Prize Forum, we have had the opportunity to help facilitate a set of dialogue sessions on ...

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Participants at the High-level Dialogue Session at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway, June 8, 2017.

This year, in addition to putting together the program for this September’s Nobel Peace Prize Forum, we have had the opportunity to help facilitate a set of dialogue sessions on the challenge of nuclear security in the 21st Century.  On May 31st at the United Nations in New York and June 7 & 8th at the Nobel Institute in Oslo, experts from around the world gathered for two high-level dialogues that responded to the recent Nuclear Security Summits and the current UN negotiations on banning nuclear weapons.  Working with the Foreign Policy Association and Norwegian Nobel Institute, and funded by a generous grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, these discussions took on the crucially important topic of nuclear security in a time of dramatic political change and instability in the international arena.  Participants explored the path forward toward greater security of nuclear materials and next steps on arms control talks, including the current nuclear weapons ban negotiations taking place at the United Nations.

Speakers at the meeting at the United Nations in New York included:

  • Senator Richard Lugar (click here for a link to video of his remarks)
  • Ambassador Laura Holgate, Harvard’s Belfer Center
  • Beatrice Fihn, Executive Director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
  • David A. Hamburg, President Emeritus of the Carnegie Corporation of New York
  • Maleeha Lodhi, Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the United Nations
  • Hahn Choong-hee, Deputy Permanent Representative of the Republic of Korea to the United Nations
  • Vladimir K. Safronkov, Deputy Permanent Representative of the Russian Federation to the United Nations
  • Jan Kickert, Permanent Representative of Austria to the United Nations (click here for a link to video of his remarks)
  • Christopher A. Ford, Special Assistant to the President, Senior Director for Weapons of Mass Destruction and Counterproliferation on the National Security Council
  • Toby Dalton, Co-Director of the Carnegie Endowment’s Nuclear Policy Program
  • Kier Lieber, Georgetown University
  • Daryl Press, Dartmouth College
  • Mark S. Bell, University of Minnesota

Speakers at the Nobel Institute in Oslo included:

  • Olav Njølstad, Director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute
  • Yukiya Amano, International Atomic Energy Agency, Director General
  • Erlan Idrissov, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Kazakhstan
  • Lassina Zerbo, Executive Secretary, Preparatory Commission of Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
  • Chris Hobbs, Associate Professor of War Studies at King’s College London
  • Kenneth N. Luongo, President and founder of the Partnership for Global Security
  • Jacek Kugler, Professor, Claremont Graduate College
  • Laura Holgate, Fellow at the Harvard Belfer Center, Former US Ambassador to IAEA
  • Tariq Rauf, former Coordinator, Multilateral Approaches to the Nuclear Fuel Cycle at the IAEA
  • Elena K. Sokova, Deputy Director, James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey
  • Målfrid Hegghammer, Associate Professor, University of Oslo
  • Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, Senior Fellow and Head of the Nuclear and Space Policy Initiative at the Observer Research Foundation (ORF), New Delhi.
  • Anatoly Diyakov, Professor of Physics at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and founding Director of the Center for Arms Control Studies
  • Nils Bøhmer, Managing director of the Bellona Foundation

The Nobel Peace Prize Research Institute produced two nice synopses of the talks, which can be accessed here.

Given the robust debate and progress made with these two sessions on nuclear security, we will be building on this year’s talks, and picking up on several of the key issues identified at these sessions when we reconvene in New York and Oslo in 2018.  Given the need for new perspectives on these global challenges, and in looking toward the development of new leadership in the nuclear field, we will be inviting a set of young practitioners and scholars from government, non-profit, and academic institutions from around the world to pick up the torch of these dialogues.

For the third high-level dialogue, to take place in New York the week of May 27th, 2018, we will explore the dynamics of great power politics and nuclear policy, particularly U.S.-Russia-China relations, in shaping a new regime around nuclear security and disarmament for the 21st Century. This first round of dialogues focused primarily on the implementation and strengthening of the nuclear security regime, in the wake of the Nuclear Security Summits and Pres. Obama’s Prague agenda.  These security initiatives are crucial to the ongoing work of minimizing risks of nuclear materials falling into the hands of extremist non-state actors, and safeguarding the whole range of nuclear materials, under both civilian and military control.

But these efforts on many fronts, whether it is in relation to the militaries’ nuclear stockpiles, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), or the Iran or North Korea nuclear programs, all hinge on greater cooperation between the great powers.  The high-level dialogues in Oslo in June 2018 will examine the Humanitarian Pledge and efforts toward disarmament.  We will report out the cumulative results of these dialogues with a panel discussion at the 30th Annual Nobel Peace Prize Forum, to be held in Minneapolis on September 21-22, 2018.

The work of peacemaking and regime-building takes place slowly, day by day, mostly under the radar, and beyond the noise of the daily news and headlines.  It is in this difficult, painstaking work, however, that our greatest hopes lie, and we will continue to engage in this work in the months and years to come.

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New Director of Norwegian Nobel Institute just announced. http://peace.augsburg.edu/new-director-of-norwegian-nobel-institute-just-announced/ Fri, 13 Jun 2014 14:38:30 +0000 http://peace.augsburg.edu/?p=4609 The Norwegian Nobel Institute has just announced that Olav Njølstad will be taking over as Director of the Institute when Dr. Geir Lundestad retires at the end of 2014.  Njølstad ...

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The Norwegian Nobel Institute has just announced that Olav Njølstad will be taking over as Director of the Institute when Dr. Geir Lundestad retires at the end of 2014. 

Njølstad is coming from a professor position at the University of Oslo and has previously worked as the Director of Research at the Norwegian Nobel Institute.

He will be taking over the reins on January 1st and will also serve as Secretary for the Norwegian Nobel Committee – the group that selects the Peace Prize winners. 

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