Kristian Berg Harpviken

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Born (1961-12-27) 27 December 1961 (age 64)
Lillehammer, Norway
Kristian Berg Harpviken
Kristian Berg Harpviken in 2007
Born (1961-12-27) 27 December 1961 (age 64)
Lillehammer, Norway
Alma materUniversity of Oslo
Scientific career
FieldsSociology, Peace and conflict studies
InstitutionsNorwegian Nobel Institute, Peace Research Institute Oslo
Director of Norwegian Nobel Institute
Preceded byOlav Njølstad

Kristian Berg Harpviken (born 27 December 1961) is a Norwegian sociologist and researcher, and since 2025 director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute.

Harpviken is foremost known for his competence on Afghanistan, where he has travelled extensively and conducted multiple field works since he first engaged with the country in 1989. He served as director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) for the period 2009–2017.

Harpviken has both practical and academic education. He is a trained horticulturalist and has worked as a farmer for several years. He has his cand.mag., 4 years undergraduate degree (1989) and cand.polit., 2 years post-graduate degree (1995) from University of Oslo, both in Sociology. He has been a guest researcher at the University of Chicago (1998) and Georgetown University (2008).

His cand. polit. thesis (equivalent to an M. Phil.) was entitled Political Mobilization Among the Hazara of Afghanistan, 1978–1992. In 2006 he defended his doctoral dissertation in sociology, entitled Networks in Transition: Wartime Migration in Afghanistan. Besides the main concentration on sociology, he has studied business and development studies.

Between studies, Harpviken has served as agricultural coordinator and director for the Norwegian Afghanistan Committee in Peshawar, Pakistan (1990–92). He also served 4 months conscientious objector duty for the same organization in 1989. Harpviken fulfilled 12 months compulsory military service in 1981, and trained as a conscript sergeant with specialization in mortars.

Since 1993, Harpviken has been affiliated with PRIO, first as a student associate, from 1995 as researcher, then moving on to positions as senior researcher, programme leader, deputy director, and director. After his director term 2009–2017 was concluded, he stayed on as senior researcher and research professor, up until he took up the directorship at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in January 2025.[1][2]

Harpviken has participated and led multiple long-term research projects on anti-personnel landmines, internally displaced and refugees, peacebuilding, as well as regional security. Additionally, he has provided consultancy services to several international NGOs and multilateral organizations.

Research interests

Harpviken's expertise and research interests include the dynamics of civil war (mobilization, conflict resolution, post-war reconstruction and peacebuilding), migration and transnational communities, and methodology in difficult contexts. Geographically, his research is primarily focused on Afghanistan and the region, but he also has fieldwork experience from Angola, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Iran, Mozambique, Pakistan; in large part related to the landmine situation and the landmine campaign. He has taught several courses on methodology in crisis situations both for practitioners and graduate university students.

Dissemination and outreach

Harpviken frequently comments in national media on the situation in Afghanistan, and he is also concerned with Norway's peace policy and other aspects of foreign policy. As director of PRIO, he speculated and commented each year on the Nobel Peace Prize in media outlets from all over the world.

In 2009, he was awarded the Norwegian Sociological Association's (Eastern branch) Dissemination Award.

Bibliography (selected)

References

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