Nytt
Institutt for Fredsforskning, NIFF
New Nordic Institute for Peace Research -
A
TRANSCEND Initiative
PressInfo #
97
August
11, 2000
By Johan Galtung
and Kai Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen
Kai Frithjof Jacobsen, Erni
Friholt, Johan Galtung & Jørgen Johansen
Stocken, July 24, 2000
NIFF - a New Nordic Institute
for Peace Research
At a meeting in Stocken, Sweden, on the 24th of July,
of Johan and Fumi Galtung, Kai Frithjof and Denisa
Jacobsen, Ola and Erni Friholt, Jan Oberg, and Jorgen
Johansen, TRANSCEND, TFF, and
the ICL/Praxis for Peace agreed to cooperate
on the joint launching of the New/Nordic Institute for
Peace Research (NIFF according to the Scandinavian
abbreviation, with N standing for both New and
Nordic).
Similar initiatives are also being launched by
TRANSCEND and the ICL in Canada and Romania (see next
months TRANSCEND circular).
The aim of the institute
is:
- to re-launch peace research in the Nordic
countries.
The aim of NIFF is to promote
the highest quality of research, building upon the
TRANSCEND approach of Diagnosis - Prognosis - Therapy,
combining clear and powerful critique with creative
suggestions for what can be done.
As such, it is open to all members in Norway, Sweden,
Denmark and Finland, and we would
welcome suggestions for possible members from these
countries.
When a sufficient number of Research Papers have been
collected from the members of NIFF, a new web-site will
be launched (www.niff.org) containing all NIFF Research
and Publications.
In the beginning, the Institute will not have one
concrete location, but will be based instead upon
a network of researchers
throughout the Nordic countries, cooperating on joint
research programmes and publications.
NIFF Research Papers
currently being prepared
1. An Epistemological Hoax: The Democratic Peace
Theory
2. How Autocracies End
3. World Economic Crisis
4. A Deep Culture Theory of Peace
5. Coopting Social Movements - NGOs, GNGOs, CSOs
6. Development Imperialism: Aid and the Spread of
Capitalism
7. Reconciliation and Forgiveness

Johan
Galtung
TFF adviser
Other Research Topics
currently under consideration
1. Peace Research--Relaunching a Nordic Tradition
2. Alternative Defence--Peace by Peaceful Means
vs.Increasing Militarism
3. Nonviolence and Satyagraha
4. Gender and Conflict
5. Youth and Conflict
6. Peace Education
1-Page outlines for each research topic are currently
being developed and will be circulated to all NIFF
members.
If you would like to receive copies of these outlines,
please contact Kai Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen at
<icl@c2i.net>. Suggestions and comments are
welcome.
Books currently under
preparation
1. Konfliktlaere (in Norwegian), Johan Galtung
2. The Struggle Continues--Peace Praxis, Kai Frithjof
Brand-Jacobsen (<icl@c2i.net>to be translated into
Norwegian).

Kai
Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen
TFF Peace Antenna
Education &
Training
NIFF will be working to promote peace education in the
Nordic countries. Current and potential sites include:
Tromso (with Vidar Vambheim), Trondheim (with Magnus
Haavelsrud), Sandnes (with Tore Lende and Eva Nordland),
Bodo (with Martin Eide).
Further sites will be developed throughout the Nordic
countries.
Action
NIFF will be involved in direct peace action, both in
the Nordic countries, and in cooperation with others
internationally.
Dissemination
Dissemination is crucial to NIFF and includes
NIFF Newsletter
A 1-Page Information on Specific Conflicts.
NIFF Research Papers
First internet, then hard-copy.
Channels
Internet - media - organizations - schools (all
levels, including colleges, hoyskole, skills specific,
etc.) - Shopping centres - journalists - local/national
newspapers/television/radio
Targets
Peace activists and grassroots organizations - social and
community organizations - teachers and students -
journalists - policy makers - general population.
Funding
Initial funding for NIFF includes a 9-month stipend
for Kai Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen, who will be working
during this period to secure core funding for the
institute as well as research specific funding for NIFF
Research Programmes.
Motives and
needs
The idea of peace, like the idea of health, must be as
old as humankind, like the idea of (re)searching for
peace. But institutionalized peace research can be traced
to the Nordic countries in the late 1950s/1960s;
combining scholarly concerns with innovative social
science and activist concerns with the disastrous Cold
War mix of stalinism and nuclearism.
Forty years, one generation, have now passed, and time
has come to make a new, fresh start with a new institute
for peace research, Nytt Institutt for fredsforskning,
NIFF (N also stands for Nordic), drawing on TRANSCEND's
and ICL's efforts to promote peace studies around the
world, but organizationally independent of either (see
www.transcend.org
and www.globalsolidarity.org).
NIFF will, at least to start with, be "virtual" until
somebody also offers NIFF an abode in real space,
somewhere in the Nordic countries.
This is a proposal for a five point program:
(1) NIFF will promote peace by
peaceful means by exploring and help enact
nonviolent initiatives to defuse dangerous conflict
formations (which are much broader than the conflict
arenas the media and the governments/diplomats focus
on).
(2) NIFF will work actively with
peace movements and other NGOs that cannot be
suspected of having hidden geopolitical/economic agendas,
and develop ideas in dialogue with them.
(3) NIFF will generally work in
the three Scandinavian languages,
and in English.
(4) NIFF will as soon as possible establish
a web-site with research
papers by its members; numbered by the order in
which they appear. Later they may also be available as
working papers, but they will always be freely available
through downloading.
(5) NIFF will establish a press
service in Nordic languages for adequate journalistic
coverage of important conflict formations,
including the situation of "minorities" in the Nordic
countries. Some of this will be formatted for quick
downloading and local posting in shopping centers
etc.

The NIFF initiative was launched in
this white house
TFF and NIFF
As a participant in the Stocken founding meeting, TFF
director Jan Oberg says:
"TFF is proud to be associated with this initiative.
Nordic peace research has been successfully
institutionalized as university institutes and state
institutes over the mentioned four decades. This is well
and good, but TFF has, from its inception in 1985,
embodied two additional ideas or visions; first, that
peace research must also develop outside and independent
of these structures. Second, that at least some peace
research must be useful to those hit by violence and
inform its research by conducting empirical work
in conflict regions. In short, research through
engagement, not only through in-house academic exchanges
and books.
NIFF's aims and values are completely compatible with
TFF's and we can be highly useful to each other.
Sometimes the search and re-search has to imply that we
re-start and re-think what it is we want to do as
intellectuals-cum-activists.
NIFF will solidify the triangular relations between
TRANSCEND, The International Correspondence League
ICL/Peace Practise and TFF. Kai is also a TFF Peace
Antenna; Johan Galtung - a friend and TFF adviser - and I
met for the first time in 1974 in a place that later on
should become fateful for European politics and world
order: the former Yugoslavia, Dubrovnik and the
Inter-University Centre there to be more precise. It
feels right to re-launch a peace research effort based on
old ideals - such as nonviolence - and apply them to the
hard problems of the contemporary world.
I believe that the end of the Cold War since 1989 and
the conflicts in the Balkans also justify a re-think of
what peace research can do and what roles it should play
- and perhaps not play.
One more reason explains why TFF engages in this. We
share the view that it is important to try to re-turn to
a Nordic research focus which we more or less left with
the publishing of "Nordic Security in the 1990s.
Options in the Changing Europe" edited by me and
published by Pinter Publishers in 1992 (see this site's
Publications section).
It seems to me that it is time to take up questions
such as:
* How do people around the world see the Nordic
countries, their cultures and policies? What have Nordic
societies meant to others; until recently, they seem to
have been a model or ideal to many?
* Do they individually and as a region have a special
contribution to make to the deeply problematic world
order developments these years?
* How come that Nordic security and foreign policies
transformed themselves towards European integration and
even full endorsement of NATO war-fighting in Europe with
so little debate?
* How did each of the Nordic governments manage over a
few years to become so loyal to European integration -
and now European military integration and build-up - and
skip the "Nordicness" of our policies, cultural values
and philosophies which are rooted in centuries of
traditions and popular visions.
* The Nordic values and social models could, and I
believe still can, make an significant contribution to
bigger future fields such as world development and social
justice, security, peace and democratization. The
question is how?
This autumn, TFF will launch a section on our homepage
about this European military integration and its
implication - helping everybody who cares to re-search
what is going on underneath the official rhetoric. It
also coincides with Sweden taking over the EU
chairmanship from New Year 2001.
And one more thing: NIFF was launched at Stocken on
the West coast of Sweden, a place of great natural beauty
and peace. We were hosted by two remarkable people who
embody peace in every step they take - Erni and Ola
Friholt. PressInfo 98 will actually be about them!"
The focus is Nordic, but it is the Nordic region in a
wider world perspective. So, we would love to have
comments and ideas to all this from people around the
world," ends Jan Oberg.

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