Community policing in post-conflict contexts

Event date
25 April 2023
Event time
12:30 - 14:00
Oxford week
TT 1
Audience
Anyone
Venue
Microsoft Teams
Speaker(s)

Professor Ingrid Nyborg - Norweigan University of Life Sciences. 

Notes & Changes

Link to the talk can be found here: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MGE0NzY2YjYtZGU3Yi00MWUwLTllYjgtM2NlNDkyYWY1YzRm%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22cc95de1b-97f5-4f93-b4ba-fe68b852cf91%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2208082c25-9892-465b-b68f-c7568ef7f166%22%7d

 

Ingrid Nyborg spent the early years of her career working with research and education programs in agriculture and resource management issues in Africa and South Asia. She now specializes in post-conflict and post-crisis development in South Asia, with a focus on Pakistan and Afghanistan.

 

She has since 2005 been studying rural livelihoods in Afghanistan, focusing on participatory methods and co-production of knowledge with local development organizations as an example of capacity-building research.

 

Her focus in Pakistan has been the study of human security, gender and development in the Swat Valley, where she explores how local perceptions of security and development compare with the policy narratives. She also is studying humanitarian policy and social vulnerability to climate change in Pakistan, where she has conducted fieldwork in Swat and Sindh, areas hard hit by the 2010 superfloods.

 

In 2015 she received funding from the EC Horizon 2020 research program for a five-year study of Community-Based Policing in Post-Conflict Police Reform. This was a global study of 11 case countries where she and her team of international researchers studied examples of alternative, non-militarized forms of policing which focus on trust-building, and broader understandings of security and well-being, as well as the use of ICT.  

 

She is currently the Head of the Center for Community-Based Policing and Post-Conflict Police Reform (ICT4COP Center), based at the Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Norwegian University of Life Sciences.

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