International Politics and European Union Studies

En stor byggnad med en klocka på sidan av den. Photographer: Teiksma Buseva

We study global and European processes, focusing on how conflicts, cooperation, and institutions are formed, evolve, and influence societal development. Our research covers EU decision-making, international organizations, global norms, migration, and developments in the Middle East and Africa.

We study global and European processes, focusing on how conflicts, cooperation, and institutions are formed, evolve, and influence societal development. Our research covers EU decision-making, international organizations, global norms, migration, and developments in the Middle East and Africa.

We examine global and European processes with an emphasis on how conflicts, cooperation, and institutions are shaped, transformed, and affect societal change. The research encompasses both the EU’s internal work and decision-making processes, as well as the Union’s relations with the wider world, the emergence and diffusion of global norms, and the role of international organizations in governance and policy development. Key themes also include the UN Sustainable Development Goals and political and societal developments in the Middle East and Africa. An important part of the research addresses migration, diaspora, and transnational ties.

European Union and decision-making

Within EU research, we analyze how political decisions emerge in the many working groups where the Union’s policies are negotiated and implemented. Studies include, for example:

  • EU foreign and security policy
  • The development of environmental and climate policy, such as regulations on energy efficiency in the building sector
  • How the case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union influences national courts and contributes to legal development in the Member States

We also study EU–Africa relations, focusing on partnerships, development, and shifting power dynamics.

Global perspectives and international organizations

This research explores how global norms are created, spread, and contested, as well as the role international organizations play in these processes. Particular attention is given to the UN Sustainable Development Goals and how they are interpreted and applied across political and institutional contexts.

Migration, diaspora, and transnational relations

Studies of the Middle East and Africa address issues of migration, diaspora, and transnational relations, along with factors shaping development and institutional change. The analyses cover political, social, and economic dimensions.

New and emerging research areas

A growing field of research concerns the visual dimension of diplomacy. We examine how states use images, symbols, and aesthetic expressions to communicate with one another and with their citizens, and how this shapes international relations.

Previous work and contributions to education

The division’s previous work also includes a project that resulted in a university textbook in international politics, with a particular focus on international political economy.

Project

Research group

2026

August Danielson (2026) The good and the gold: moral frameworks in the practice of diplomatic aesthetics European Journal of International Relations (Article in journal) https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13540661261440343
Khalid Khayati (2026) Independentist narrative among diasporan Rojhelatî (Eastern) Kurds: practices of transborder citizenship, dynamics and lines of contestation Citizenship Studies (Article in journal) https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2026.2613841

2025

August Danielson (2025) The Functionalist Policy Paradigm and the Technical-Political Divide in the EU's Council Working Groups Europe's World: Policy Paradigms, Strategic Thinking and the Anti-Liberal Challenge, p. 213-235 (Chapter in book) https://dx.doi.org/10.46692/9781529243642.010
Johan Nordensvärd, Martin Björklund, Fredrik von Malmborg, Lina La Fleur, Emma Skogsmo, Daniel Benjamin Gamez (2025) Reviewing the EU policy nexus of energy efficiency and social policy Renewable & sustainable energy reviews, Vol. 224, Article 116128 (Article, review/survey) https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2025.116128
Thomas Nygren, Marcus Samuelsson, Per-Olof Hansson, Evgenia Efimova, Steven Bachelder (2025) AI Versus Human Feedback in Mixed Reality Simulations: Comparing LLM and Expert Mentoring in Preservice Teacher Education on Controversial Issues International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, Vol. 35, p. 2856-2888 (Article in journal) https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40593-025-00484-8

2024

Karin Leijon, Linda Moberg (2024) Limiting bureaucratic discretion? Analyzing the design and exercise of administrative judicial review in the welfare sector Governance. An International Journal of Policy, Administration and Institutions, Vol. 38, Article e12891 (Article in journal) https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gove.12891
Karin Leijon, Linda Moberg (2024) Kommunalt självstyre och rättighetslagstiftning [Local self-government and rights legislation]: Om fördelningen av makt och ansvar mellan stat och kommun [On the division of power and responsibility between national and local governments] Statsvetenskaplig Tidskrift, Vol. 126, p. 519-539 (Article in journal)

Our division and department

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