PRIO Events

Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)

Listen to dozens of seminars hosted by the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO).  https://www.prio.org/events Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 05/21/2025

    Fractured Order, Rising Influence: Southeast Asia and China’s Digital Ambitions

    As the global balance of power shifts, Southeast Asia finds itself at the crossroads of economic transformation, technological advancement, and strategic realignments. One key element in this evolving landscape is China’s Digital Silk Road (DSR), a crucial component of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) aimed at positioning China as the global technological superpower. This initiative promises to reshape the global digital order and could trigger a technological and normative rift with far-reaching geopolitical consequences. In this episode, recorded live at PRIO, a panel of regional experts and researchers unpack the findings of a three-year project examining China’s digital technology exports to Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. How are these countries managing the promises and perils of digital infrastructure tied to Beijing’s ambitions? And what does it mean for sovereignty, governance, and global power? From infrastructure and internet governance to normative influence and political risk, the conversation offers a comparative look at how Southeast Asia is responding to China’s rising digital influence. Speakers: Dr. Ilaria Carrozza, PRIODr. Cheng-Chwee Kuik, Universiti Kebangsaan MalaysiaJulio Amador III, Ateneo de Manila UniversityHabib Abiyan Dzakwan, CSIS IndonesiaChair: Nic Marsh, PRIO 🎙️ Tune in for a sharp, regionally grounded discussion on China’s Digital Silk Road and the digital futures of Southeast Asia. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 27m
  2. 02/17/2025

    Transforming Society Through Community-Engaged Research: A Conversation with Halleh Ghorashi

    Listen to this inspiring seminar with Professor Halleh Ghorashi, a leading scholar in diversity and inclusion at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU). She shared how her understanding of engaged scholarship has evolved throughout her academic journey, highlighting its impact on academia, society, and refugee communities. Drawing from her work with the 'research within expertise' lab: Refugee Academy at VU, Professor Ghorashi showcased how engaged scholarship can drive meaningful change. Critical theory and feminist epistemology have been central for her in approaching engaged scholarship from a transformative angle. In conversation with PRIO Researcher Cindy Horst, Professor Ghorashi explored her work of co-generating societal change towards increased diversity and inclusion in the Netherlands. Her transformative engaged scholarship conceptually draws on epistemic justice and builds on methods of co-creating various forms of knowledge with communities. SpeakersHalleh Ghorashi is Professor of Diversity at VU. She proposes a critical approach of diversity and inclusion and shows the importance of the perspectives of migrants and refugees through narrative methodology in creating more inclusive structures. Cindy Horst is a Research Professor in Migration and Refugee Studies and co-director of the PRIO Centre on Culture, Conflict, and Co-existence. She is the author of Creative Resistance. The social justice practices of Monarch, Halleh and Diana (Lived Places Publishing, 2023), which includes a chapter about Halleh Ghorashi. The event is co-organized by the PRIO Migration Centre and PRIO Centre on Culture, Conflict and Coexistence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 8m
  3. The Democratic Peace in a Geopolitically Changing World

    12/06/2024

    The Democratic Peace in a Geopolitically Changing World

    In light of the shifting geopolitical landscape, the long-standing theory of democratic peace - asserting that democracies rarely wage war against each other - is facing critical scrutiny. This panel will discuss whether this principle still holds true in an era marked by shifting power dynamics, rising authoritarianism, and the erosion of liberal democratic norms. With conflicts increasingly shaped by hybrid warfare, economic rivalries, and regional instability, the traditional correlation between democracy and peace may be weakening. This discussion will explore whether contemporary democracies are more prone to conflict, or if the theory needs to be redefined for a multipolar world. The panel will also revisit Francis Fukuyama's "End of History" argument, which predicted the triumph of liberal democracy as the final form of human governance. As new global players and political ideologies emerge, panelists will assess whether this notion is still relevant, or if we are witnessing the rise of new patterns of conflict that challenge the foundations of democratic peace. SpeakersMs. Hilde F. Johnson, European Institute of PeaceProf. Carl Henrik Knutsen, University of OsloDr. Marianne Dahl, Peace Research Institute OsloThe discussion will be moderated by Dan Banik, Academic Director of Circle U's democracy hub. This event is part of Oslo Peace Days 2024. Follow this link for full programme. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    59 min

About

Listen to dozens of seminars hosted by the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO).  https://www.prio.org/events Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.