Conflict and economy
Economic resources and armed conflict are related. International organisations consider growth and jobs a way to limit recruitment to radicalized and armed groups, and trade as a means to peaceful co-existence. But what is actually going on? Who controls trade, transport and production in conflict areas? Finally, how do economic sanctions affect political and armed conflicts?
Research and activites
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DIIS Working Paper2024Opium flows, roadblocks and Illicit finance in Burma's Shan StateJohn Buchanan
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DIIS Working Paper2024a political economy analysis of checkpoint taxation in AfghanistanSarajuddin Isar
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Journal Article2024Finn Stepputat & Jethro Norman
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DIIS Working Paper2024Roadblocks, taxation and control in conflictPeer Schouten, Vanessa Van den Boogaard, Max Gallien, Shalaka Thakur & Florian Weigand
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Photo/illustration by MONUSCO/Michael Ali copyright licenseJournal Article2024assembling the Ghana Armed ForcesPeter Albrecht & Fiifi Edu-Afful
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Journal Article2024Peter Albrecht, Luke Patey, Rita Abrahamsen & Paul D. Williams
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Photo/illustration by UNMISS via Flickr.com copyright licenseJournal Article2024China's peacemaking and peacekeeping in South SudanLuke Patey
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DIIS Report2024How commercial American space imagines our future and shapes our presentVibeke Schou Tjalve
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DIIS Report2024The limits of power in Erdogan's TurkeyJakob Lindgaard
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Photo/illustration by Cecilie CastorArticle2024Andreas Bøje Forsby
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Photo/illustration by Cecilie CastorDIIS Report2024How the Nordics approach TaiwanAndreas Bøje Forsby
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Photo/illustration by U.S. Department of Energy from United States, Public domain, via Wikimedia CommonsBook Chapter2023divergent national paths towards a common green futureIzabela Surwillo & Veronika Slakaityte
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Book Chapter2023Lars Erslev Andersen
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Photo/illustration by Photo by UN Photo/Tobin Jones copyright licenseJournal Article2023Ahmed Musa & Nauja Kleist
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Journal Article2023Private security contractors and the plasticity of Mogadishu’s international ‘green zone’Jethro Norman
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Article2023External Investment, Intensifying Internal Competition, and the Struggle for NarrativeJethro Norman
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Journal Article2022competing visions of technopolitical ordersTrine Villumsen Berling, Izabela Surwillo & Veronika Slakaityte
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Book Chapter2022Structural Variations of the US-China Great Power RivalryAndreas Bøje Forsby
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Book Chapter2022The Huthis as a non-state actor with a foreign policyMaria-Louise Clausen
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Chapter2022Mona Kanwal Sheikh & Saer El-Jaichi
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Journal Article2022Mona Kanwal Sheikh
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Report2022Somali diaspora practices and their effectsNauja Kleist & Masud Abdi
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DIIS Working Paper2022An overview and lessons learntMarie Ladekjær Gravesen & Mikkel Funder
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Photo/illustration by Lennart Larsen via Wiki Commons copyright licenseJournal Article2022The possibility for collective action against China’s economic coercion seems more likely than ever.Luke Patey
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Book2022the Origins of Violence in Central AfricaPeer Schouten
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Brief2022Improving EU Sanctions EnforcementKim B. Olsen
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Brief2022Identifying its triggers and discussing the implications for ScandinaviaAndreas Bøje Forsby & Bjørnar Sverdrup-Thygeson
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Brief2022Trine Villumsen Berling & Izabela Surwillo
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Brief2022Current trends and future scenarios of Somali diaspora engagementNauja Kleist, Ahmed Musa & Jethro Norman
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DIIS Policy Brief2021Understanding Beijing’s evolving statecraftLuke Patey
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Photo/illustration by Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Ritzau ScanpixDIIS Policy Brief2021A ‘Geopolitical’ European Union should encourage cooperation in the Red Sea regionFabrizio Tassinari & Mehari Taddele Maru
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DIIS Policy Brief2021Avoiding harm, delivering impactAdam Moe Fejerskov, Maria-Louise Clausen & Sarah Seddig
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DIIS Policy Brief2021What we know and what we need to know more aboutMohamed Aden Hassan, Sahra Ahmed Koshin, Peter Albrecht, Mark Bradbury, Fatima Dahir Mohamed, Abdirahman Edle Ali, Karuti Kanyinga, Nauja Kleist, George Michuki, Ahmed M. Musa, Jethro Norman & Obadia Okinda
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Photo/illustration by Cecilie CastorDIIS Longread2020How poor Brazilians cope with life under quarantineMarie Kolling
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS policy brief2020climate-cattle-conflictSigne Marie Cold-Ravnkilde & Peer Schouten
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2019Dino Krause
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DIIS Policy Brief2019Money and Security in the South China SeaYang Jiang
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DIIS Policy Brief2017The EU's Desert Front against migrationHans Lucht
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Brief2016Kasper Hoffmann
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DIIS Impact2016Partnerships in Africa's Extractive IndustriesMarianne Bach Mosebo
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DIIS Policy Brief2016Jihadist violence in Nigeria continuesSine Plambech & Signe Marie Cold-Ravnkilde
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DIIS Policy Brief2016Unpopular capital interventions deserve a chanceJairo Munive
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DIIS Policy Brief2016China’s foreign policy and security challengesLuke Patey
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseDIIS Comment2015A (re)surge in South-South Cooperation - but with a limited knowledge baseKristoffer Nilaus Tarp
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DIIS Impact2015Sustainable Development Goal 16Kristoffer Nilaus Tarp
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DIIS Impact2015Peace goal requires bridge building between old and new powersLouise Riis Andersen
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DIIS Policy Brief2013the need for support
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DIIS Policy Brief2013a case study of OPENDiana Felix da Costa, Søren Vester Haldrup, John Karlsrud, Frederik Rosén & Kristoffer Nilaus Tarp
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DIIS Policy Brief2008Lars Buur
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DIIS Policy Brief2006Sudan in FocusLuke Patey
Experts
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Photo/illustration by Lynggaardhansenfoto.dk
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Photo/illustration by Lynggaardhansenfoto.dk