Lecture Trust and distrust in the Nordic Arctic The legacy and relevance of the Nordic Peace Add to calendar 2025-04-03 14:00 2025-04-03 15:30 Europe/Rome Trust and distrust in the Nordic Arctic Sala Triaria Villa Schifanoia YYYY-MM-DD Print Share: Share on Facebook Share on BlueSky Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email Scheduled dates Apr 03 2025 14:00 - 15:30 CEST Sala Triaria, Villa Schifanoia Organised by Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies GGP: Global Governance Programme Join Gunnar Rekvig as he explores the Nordic Peace legacy, its role in trust-building, and its relevance in a rapidly remilitarising Arctic. The Nordic Peace emerged from a historical background where war was a common means of conflict resolution. This pattern ended in 1814, establishing an ad hoc framework for peaceful conflict resolution in the Nordic region. Key principles of compromise, unilateral accommodation, and trust-building became the foundations of the Nordic Peace.During the Cold War, these principles enabled Norway, a founding NATO member, to develop sophisticated mechanisms for managing relations with the Soviet Union. Through trust-building initiatives that balanced deterrence with reassurance, Norway helped create a zone of low tensions. However, this legacy of trust, enabled by the conflict resilience of the Nordic Peace, has diminished as Norway abandoned its reassurance policies following the war in Ukraine.Today, the Arctic is undergoing rapid re-militarisation in an era of multipolarity, alongside increased activity due to climate change, returning the region to the global arena it was during the Cold War. The competencies that once maintained peaceful coexistence in the North are more relevant than ever—yet they are increasingly diminishing in the post-post-Cold War Arctic. Links EU Asia project Related events Read more Conference From 12 Jun 2025 14:00 CEST to 13 Jun 2025 18:00 CEST Villa Ruspoli, Piazza Indipendenza n. 9, Florence, University of Florence Conference Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Botticelli v. Warhol: Comparative perspectives on the use of cultural heritage images Speakers: Alessandro Simoni (University of Florence) Gabriele Gori (Fondazione CR Firenze) Silvia Zonnedda (Fondazione CR Firenze) Antonella Ranaldi (SABAP-FI) Vittoria Barsotti (Fondazione CR Firenze) Alessandra De Luca (University of Florence) Ariane Thomas (Louvre Museum) Jennifer Celani (Soprintendenza Archeologia Belle Arti e Paesaggio of Florence, Pistoia and Prato) Simone Torricelli (University of Florence) Giorgio Resta (Roma Tre University) Amy Adler (New York University) Cecilie Hollberg (Harvard University) Eleonora Rosati (University of Stockholm) Paolo Catallozzi (Italian Supreme Court) Alessandro Cogo (University of Torino) Gordon Humphreys (EU Intellectual Property Office) Cristiana Sappa (IÉSEG School of Management) Giacomo Pailli (University of Palermo) Massimo Sterpi (Gianni e Origoni) Marketa Trimble (University of Nevada) Marina Markellou (University of Groningen) Eduard Treppoz (Panthéon-AssasUniversity Paris II) Lucrezia Palandri (Univeristy of Insubria) Caterina Sganga (SantÁnna School of Advanced Studies) Silvia Scalzini (LUISS University) Giulia Dore (University of Trento) Anna Pirri Valentini (IMT School for Advances Studies Lucca and LUISS University) Rina Elster Pantalony (Columbia University Libraries) Deborah De Angelis (Wikimedia Italia & Creative Commons) Niccolò Galli (European University Institute)
Read more Conference From 12 Jun 2025 14:00 CEST to 13 Jun 2025 18:00 CEST Villa Ruspoli, Piazza Indipendenza n. 9, Florence, University of Florence Conference Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Botticelli v. Warhol: Comparative perspectives on the use of cultural heritage images Speakers: Alessandro Simoni (University of Florence) Gabriele Gori (Fondazione CR Firenze) Silvia Zonnedda (Fondazione CR Firenze) Antonella Ranaldi (SABAP-FI) Vittoria Barsotti (Fondazione CR Firenze) Alessandra De Luca (University of Florence) Ariane Thomas (Louvre Museum) Jennifer Celani (Soprintendenza Archeologia Belle Arti e Paesaggio of Florence, Pistoia and Prato) Simone Torricelli (University of Florence) Giorgio Resta (Roma Tre University) Amy Adler (New York University) Cecilie Hollberg (Harvard University) Eleonora Rosati (University of Stockholm) Paolo Catallozzi (Italian Supreme Court) Alessandro Cogo (University of Torino) Gordon Humphreys (EU Intellectual Property Office) Cristiana Sappa (IÉSEG School of Management) Giacomo Pailli (University of Palermo) Massimo Sterpi (Gianni e Origoni) Marketa Trimble (University of Nevada) Marina Markellou (University of Groningen) Eduard Treppoz (Panthéon-AssasUniversity Paris II) Lucrezia Palandri (Univeristy of Insubria) Caterina Sganga (SantÁnna School of Advanced Studies) Silvia Scalzini (LUISS University) Giulia Dore (University of Trento) Anna Pirri Valentini (IMT School for Advances Studies Lucca and LUISS University) Rina Elster Pantalony (Columbia University Libraries) Deborah De Angelis (Wikimedia Italia & Creative Commons) Niccolò Galli (European University Institute)