Digital diplomacy

October 28 2013

Thursday 31 October, 2013, 19:00–21:00 at Fritt Ord, Uranienborgveien 2, Oslo

Are international relations and debates being revolutionized by social media? Nations rush to build their ‘online presence’, interacting and engaging with global publics. Diplomatic time and money are poured into Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. But does it work? And in the era of Wikileaks and Edward Snowden, is technology undermining diplomacy rather than supporting it?

Four prominent panelists will help us distinguish hype from reality and what is genuinely new from old problems in new trappings.

PROGRAMME

Introductory remarks:
Giles Scott-Smith, Roosevelt Study Center/Leiden University, Netherlands
Tore Tennøe, the Norwegian Board of Technology

Panel discussion: moderated by Tore Tennøe
Thomas Zeiler, University of Colorado
Laura Belmonte, Oklahoma State University
Barbara Keys, University of Melbourne
Frode O. Andersen, Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Giles Scott-Smith is professor of diplomatic history, University of Leiden, Netherlands. Chairman of Transatlantic Studies Association since 2013. Author and editor of numerous books on the history of relations between the US and Europe.

Tore Tennøe is director of The Norwegian Board of Technology (Teknologirådet), and currently advising the Norwegian Parliament and Government on the digital transformation of law enforcement, education and health services. Graduate degrees in international history and history of technology from the London School of Economics and the University of Oslo.

Thomas Zeiler is professor of history and international affairs at the University of Colorado at Boulder. President (2012) of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations and executive editor of Diplomatic History. Author of six books, ranging from baseball to military history. Member of the U.S. Department of State’s Historical Advisory Committee.

Laura Belmonte is professor of history and director of American Studies at Oklahoma State University. Serves on the U.S. Department of State’s Historical Advisory Committee. Among her books are Selling the American Way: U.S. Propaganda, and the Cold War (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008) and Speaking of America: Readings in U.S. History.

Barbara Keys is senior lecturer in History at the University of Melbourne. Keys has researched the history of intercultural relations, globalization, human rights, the effects of transnational movements and organizations on the behavior of states, and the role of emotions in history. Among her publications is Globalizing Sport: National Rivalry and International Community in the 1930s (Harvard University Press, 2006).

Frode Overland Andersen is the deputy head of communications in the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He joined the Norwegian Foreign Service in 1999 and has worked extensively on media and communications, security politics, as well as serving in the Balkans and at NATO. Graduate degree in comparative politics from Freie Universität in Berlin and the University of Bergen.

This event is funded by The Norwegian Board of Technology, Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History at the University of Oslo, Embassy of the United States in Oslo, Walker Institute of International and Area Studies (University of South Carolina), Roosevelt Study Center (Netherlands).

News

Free Media Awards for 2025

September 9 2025

The Fritt Ord Foundation and the ZEIT Stiftung Bucerius hereby announce that the Free Media Awards for 2025 will be presented to media outlets and journalists from Ukraine, Georgia, Hungary, Russia, Belarus and Azerbaijan

Greater diversity among journalists results in greater diversity among sources

September 2 2025

A recently published report reveals biases in who is allowed to participate in the public debate. According to a new report from Retriever commissioned by the Fritt Ord Foundation, men who have Nordic names dominate both as sources and journalists in Norwegian media. Women, younger people and people with foreign names are less likely to be included. This is true both as interviewees and as authors of articles. That being said, greater diversity among journalists results in greater diversity among sources.

Eirin Larsen and Hadia Tajik join the Fritt Ord Board

August 5 2025

Eirin Larsen (36) and Hadia Tajik (42) bring valuable experience from journalism, technology, politics and jurisprudence to the Fritt Ord Board.

Making the film «Farouk» – on the geologist that secured Norway its oil

July 1 2025

Geologist Farouk Al-Kasim joined the the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate in 1968, shaping Norwegian petroleum resource management for decades afterwards. Now, documentary film director Halkawt Mustafa and producer Janne Hjeltnes are making a film about Al-Kasim’s life and reflections.
“Farouk tells me something in this film that he has not talked about before, because he has always told the version he feels Norway wanted to hear,” recounts Mustafa, who has Iraqi roots himself.

Read the interview with the director and see the list of grants awarded by Fritt Ord in June 2025.