Circle U. National Conference, Oslo

"European values in times of upheaval – our political, institutional and economic order under pressure."

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We live in turbulent times, on a continent where our values are under pressure. This two-day conference will shed light on academic freedom, quality assurance and implications of the war in Ukraine, with a mixture of keynotes, plenary debate and key lectures. The conference will be held in English.

Programme – 5 December

European values and higher education – Has the Bologna process built the institutional frameworks we need?

12:45–13:30 Registration and lunch

13:30–13:35 Introduction by moderator Kelly Davis

Kelly Davis

Kelly Davis, University of Oslo

Kelly is in her third semester of the MPhil in Higher Education program at the University of Oslo. She obtained a BA and an MA in European Politics and Policy from New York University, and prior to coming to Oslo, she worked in international education and career services at a small college in California.

In addition to her studies, Kelly works part time with the Climate Action Network for International Educators (CANIE) and co-produces and hosts a new podcast, THESIS: Trends in Higher Education Systems in International Spheres.

13:35–13:45 Opening by Rector Svein St?len

Rector Svein St?len

Svein St?len, Rector of the University of Oslo

St?len has been elected the first president of Circle U. In addition, he chairs the board of Norway's first innovation district, Oslo Science City, the board of The Guild of European Research-Intensive Universities and is board member of Oslo University Hospital. He leads the Olav Thon Foundation's two professional councils, and the Anders Jahres Foundation for the Promotion of Science.

He is a professor of chemistry, with research interest in inorganic materials, especially relationships between structure and properties.

13:45–14:15 Keynote: The Bologna process, Academic Freedom and European Values

Portrait photo of Andrea Pet?
Andrea Pet?. Photo: Central European University

Dr. Andrea Pet?, Central European University

Dr. Andrea Pet?, winner of the University of Oslo Human Rights Award, is a Hungarian historian and a professor of gender studies at the Central European University. She receives the Human Rights Award for her defence of academic freedom and institutional autonomy.

Abstract

The contemporary moment in which we as Europeans find ourselves is shaped by environmental destruction, political polarization, structural and other forms of violence, and the transformation of liberal democracy into autocracies of different forms. This explains the predominance of apocalyptic visions and doomsday scenarios in contemporary political discourse and media. That is why it is important that the alternative tools of knowledge production and practices of political engagement, which are already being put into effect in various activist communities throughout Europe and beyond, become more visible. The talk discusses why higher education matters as a site of knowledge production, transfer, and a site of academic authorization producing “better stories”. 

14:15–14:45 Keynote: Mosaic Commandments or starting point for exploring common values? The role of the Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance in European Higher Education.

Portrait photo of Jens Jungblut
Jens Jungblut, University of Oslo

Dr. Jens Jungblut, University of Oslo

Dr. Jungbluts research interests include among others party politics, policy-making, and public governance in the knowledge policy domain (higher education & research policy), organizational change in higher education, the role of (academic) expertise in policy advice, and communication of public organizations.

Abstract

The Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance in European Higher Education (ESGs) have been a key policy instrument in the harmonization of European higher education policy. Initially adopted at a ministerial meeting in Bergen in 2005, they are the reference frame for quality assurance work in the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) and an important basis for international collaboration.

Throughout the years there have been several debates in the European higher education community regarding the desired role of the ESGs as well as which aspects of higher education they should cover (e.g. should they focus on procedural aspects of quality assurance or also include regulations regarding the outcomes).

The keynote will present a short overview of the development of the ESGs over time as well as discuss the role that the ESGs can or should play in European higher education today.

14:45–15:00 Coffee break

15:00–15:45 Panel debate on European values in the higher education area

European values is one of the core foundations of the European higher education area, a foundation that is also important for the European University Initiative. How are these values built into the structures we are developing in Europe – for example in European quality assurance practices? Have we ended up with technocratic rules and regulations without paying attention to the European values we want to promote?

In the panel:

Moderator is Bj?rn Stensaker, Vice-Rector for Education, University of Oslo.

15:45–16:15 Coffee, fresh fruit and pastries

16:15–17:15 The University of Oslo Human Rights Award Ceremony

Photo from Gamle festsal in Domus Academica
"Gamle festsal" in Domus Academica.

We leave Domus Bibliotheca and walk across the University Square to Domus Academica where Dr. Andrea Pet? is awarded the University of Oslo Human Rights Award for 2022. This also marks the opening of the Oslo Peace Days.

Programme for the award ceremony

  • Welcome and opening of Oslo Peace Days by Rector Svein St?len
  • Screening of film about prize winner Andrea Pet?
  • Music by Steinar Raknes and Unni Wilhelmsen
  • Introduction of Andrea Pet? by head of the prize committee, Pro-Rector Ase Gornitzka
  • Speech by prize winner Andrea Pet?
  • Music by Steinar Raknes and Unni Wilhelmsen
  • The Eitinger conversation: Adrea Pet? in dialogue with head of Kilden Journal of Gender Research, Linda Rustad
  • Rector Svein St?len presents the award

From 17:15 Reception after the award ceremony

Programme – 6 December

War in Ukraine and its implications for Europe

This event is dedicated to the ongoing war in Ukraine and the social and security consequences this conflict has on the political and economic order in Europe.

Three keynote lectures tackle the interconnected issues of memory and war, trust and war, and security and war. Lectures are followed by three roundtables (on the same topic) where participants from Circle U. partner universities, along with keynote speakers, discuss issues raised during the keynote presentation.

8:30–9:00 Registration and coffee

9:00–9:05 Introduction by moderator Kelly Davis

9:05–9:25 Keynote: Memories of Wars and Wars of Memories

Portrait photo of Stipe Odak
Stipe Odak, UCLouvain

Stipe Odak, Université Catholique de Louvain

Wars and conflicts are among the most frequent elements in social memories. Their usage, however, is highly ambiguous. Collective memories of suffering promote solidarity among group members and provide a framework for interpreting the scattered individual experiences. At the same time, those memories carry an exclusionary potential towards outgroups, making rapprochement more difficult. By combining theoretical models with case studies, the lecture addresses this nexus between wars, memory, and identity.

Biography

Stipe Odak is a researcher at the Institut de sciences politiques Louvain-Europe at UCLouvain (Belgium). He received his Ph.D. in Political and Social Sciences from UCLouvain and a doctorate in Theology from KU Leuven (Belgium). His research focuses on the intersections of religion, conflicts, and collective memories. In 2019-2020, he worked as a Fulbright fellow at Columbia University, developing a theory of post-conflict memory as a form of performative justice. He is a published poet and a member of PEN International.

9:25–9:45 Keynote: Historical Corruption and Trust Lessons from the Scandinavian Arm’s Race and War in Europe Today

Profile photo of Gert Tinggaard Svendsen
Gert Tinggaard Svendsen, Aarhus University

Gert Tinggaard Svendsen, Aarhus University

The Scandinavian arm’s race between Denmark-Norway and Sweden-Finland in the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries created what could be termed a ‘fiscal-military state’. Fighting corruption was necessary to increase warfare capacity and probably benefitted social trust accumulation and economic growth as well in peace time. Could such lessons apply to war in Europe today?

Biography

Gert Tinggaard Svendsen is a professor of Comparative Politics at the Department of Political Science, Aarhus University. He got his PhD (Econ.) in 1996 and MSc (Pol.Sci.) in 1991. Svendsen is active within the public choice societies, e.g. member of the editorial board of Public Choice (2004–2009), Chair of the Danish Public Choice Association (2004–2006), and elected member of the Executive Board in the European Public Choice Society (2014–2017). Svendsen is the author of numerous books and peer-reviewed articles in leading international journals. His main research interests are trust, social capital, collective action problems, institutional quality, welfare economics, and climate policy. In 2016, Svendsen was dubbed Knight of the Order of Dannebrog by the Danish Queen for his scientific contributions.

9:45–10:05 Keynote: War in Ukraine and European Security Order

Profile photo of Iver B. Neumann
Iver B. Neumann, Fridtjof Nansen Institute

Iver B. Neumann, Fridtjof Nansen Institute

Iver will focus first on Russia’s key war aim that seems to have been to gain more strategic depth towards NATO by means of an imperial strategy, and how this backfired by firming what Russia now calls ‘the collective west’. As a consequence, the new European order will turn on a razor-sharp boundary separating Russia and probably Belarus from NATO. Iver will then go on to discuss how the conflict is primarily a regional one, and how this makes the present situation distinct from that of the cold war 1949–91.

Biography

Iver B. Neumann is a Director of the Fridtjof Nansen Institute at Polh?gda, Lysaker. From 2012-2017 he was the Montague Burton Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He has also served as Research Director and Director at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI) and Adjunct Professor in International Relations at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. His research interest is in how polities relate to one another, in pre-history, in history, in imagined worlds, and in principle. He usually draws on Continental social theory to analyse this, and use empirical examples from Russian foreign policy, Norwegian foreign policy and, increasingly, from archaeology.

10:05–10:20 Coffee break

10:20–11:20 Roundtables

Three roundtables on the topics covered by the keynotes. Participants join one of the roundtables, but can switch tables if they find other topics also interesting.

11:20–11:30 Closing remarks

11:30–12:00 Lunch

 

Practical information

The conference venue

Domus Bibliotheca with The Royal Castle in the background to the left. Photo: ?UiO/Marianne Karlsen

The venue Domus Bibliotheca is located in the heart of Oslo between the Parliament building and The Royal Palace.

The address is Karl Johans gate 47, 0162 Oslo.
Find Domus Bibliotheca on Google Maps.

Travel information

Getting from Oslo Airport to the city center is easy. The train takes about 20 minutes from the airport to the city centre. The train routes L12 Kongsberg, R10 Drammen or R11 Skien are the least expensive travel options from the airport. Visit vy.no for train routes and tickets. You can also use the Airport Express which departs every 10 minutes from Oslo Airport.

Tickets for all public transport while you're in Oslo can be bought from Ruter. To have the Ruter app installed on your phone is the most convenient way to find routes and buy tickets, but you can also choose to buy a physical Travelcard.

Accomodation

Since the conference is held in the city centre you have many of hotels to choose from in walking distance from Domus Bibliotheca. See Google maps for an overview.

Winter in Oslo

It's not easy to predict the weather, especially since last December it was everything between -10°C and +8°C. Our best advice is to check the weather forecast at yr.no before you leave home.

 

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Published Oct. 26, 2022 7:04 PM - Last modified Dec. 6, 2022 3:07 PM