Sonja Kittelsen was an External Associate at PRIO until 2011.
News
Tuesday, 21 Aug 2007
Sonja Kittelsen has published an article in volume 16, issue 2 of European Security. The article is entitled 'Beyond Bounded Space: Europe, Security, and the Global Circulation of Infectious Disease' and was written as part of the SIP 'Europe under Threat'.
Languages spoken:
English, Norwegian, French
Education:
2005 M.A. International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario
Cluster: Human Security and Global Governance
2003 Honors B.A. with distinction, English/International and Comparative Studies, Huron University College, London, Ontario
Journal Article in Security Dialogue
Monograph
Journal Article in European Security
PRIO Policy Brief
Sonja Kittelsen has published an article in volume 16, issue 2 of European Security. The article is entitled 'Beyond Bounded Space: Europe, Security, and the Global Circulation of Infectious Disease' and was written as part of the SIP 'Europe under Threat'.
In collaboration with an international research team J. Peter Burgess has published UNESCO’s most recent report on its series on human security in a global setting: Promoting Human Security: Ethical, Normative and Educational Frameworks in Western Europe. Sonja Kittelsen also contributed to the publication.
This week PRIO helped launch a new European project on biothreat.
On World AIDS Day, it is timely to discuss the knowns and unknowns about HIV/AIDS and International Security. PRIO invites you to a seminar with this topic.
Registration: seminar@prio.no
The new SIP will study the relation between security and insecurity in Europe in the period since the attacks of 11 September 2001, focusing on six empirical cases of non-conventional insecurity in Europe: the threat of terrorist attack, social insecurity, the threat of pandemic, insecurity related to migration, gender-related insecurity, and insecurity caused by religious conflict.
PRIO has organized an international conference on the costs of security and the value of liberty in an age of trans-national terrorism. Around 80 people took part in the conference.