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Kirsti Stuvøy

Kirsti Stuvøy

Professor

  • International Environment and Development Studies, Noragric

Kirsti Stuvøy is a professor in International Relations and her research focuses on three main themes: security, war, and violence; state-civil society relations in post-socialist Russia, and cities in International Relations. Across these themes, Stuvøy demonstrates the significance of qualitative results from field research. Her regional expertise on Russia stems from extensive field research experience in the period from 2004 to 2022, working with civil society actors, workers, industry representatives, civil servants, etc. The use of a grounded, empirical approach is characterising her research also in other contexts, including Somalia and Norway. 

Kirsti Stuvøy’s research is published in journals such as Security Dialogue, International Political Sociology, Political Geography, Eurasian Geography and Economics, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Europe-Asia Studies, Contemporary Politics, and more. A list of her publications can be found in Cristin or via her Google Scholar profile. Her expertise in qualitative methodology was for example important in research on urbanization and migration in Somalia, which is featured on the website securityonthemove.co.uk. In this research, collaboration with the UN Habitat and local stakeholders in bringing research results back to the community, was important. The research led to several articles on urbanization, displacement, and insecurity in Somalia and on security research methodologies. Stuvøy’s Russia-expertise and methodological rigour was key to the design of the comparative research project “Urban margins, global transitions: Everyday security and mobility in four Russian cities” (funded by the Norwegian Research Council, 2019-2023). This kind of research is more difficult following Russia’s full-scale military invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Stuvøy continues to explore approaches to understanding everyday experiences of war in Russia.

Kirsti Stuvøy enjoys teaching and is actively engaged in study program development as co-chair of the Master’s in International Relations at NMBU. She has main responsibility for the courses “Introduction to International Relations” (EDS203), “Feminist and Critical International Relations Theory” (EDS381), “Global Transitions and the City” (EDS383) and the master thesis (M30-IR). She has taught courses in international relations and development studies at NMBU and at other universities in Norway and abroad (UK, Russia), including in International Relations Theories; Global Political Economy; Model UN (role play); Security, War and Violent Conflict; Activism and Governance; and Foreign Policy. Kirsti Stuvøy’s aims to inspire students through mentorship, fostering curosity and dedication within the academic community. 

Kirsti Stuvøy joined NMBU in 2014 and has served as Head of Education at the Department of International Environment and Development (Noragric, 2014-2016) and at the Faculty of Landscape and Society, and several other positions within the academic community. She completed her doctoral degree in 2009 at the University of Tromsø, where she started in 2004 after completion of a Magistra Artium-degree in political science, Eastern European Studies, and Economics at the University of Hamburg in Germany in 2003. Stuvøy speaks English, German and Russian, with Norwegian as her mother tongue.

Since 2023, Stuvøy is together with Professor Stig Jarle Hansen co-leading the research project “EXIT and effective reintegration of violent extremist in Scandinavia, funded by the Norwegian Research Council, 2023-2027.

  • Areas of Work
    • Forskning og undervisning
    • International Relations
    • Security
    • Political Science
  • Publications

    Academic profile and publications

    Stuvøy, Kirsti 2025: Everyday Authoritarianism in Russia: new and old stigmatisation and insecurities in monotowns. Contemporary Politics
    https://doi.org/10.1080/13569775.2025.2499282

    Stuvøy, K. (2023): Urban Transformation and Experiences of ‘Becoming Marginal’ in Russia. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. Vol 37:309-330, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10767-023-09457-y

    Chonka, P.; Stuvøy, K. & Edle, A. (2022): Eyes on the ground and eyes in the sky: Security narratives, participatory visual methods, and knowledge production in ‘danger zones’. Security Dialogue, 53(6), pp. 497-588.

    Onsager, J.E. & Stuvøy, K. (2022). Barentssamarbeidet og geopolitisk spenning: En analyse av norske erfaringer og legitimeringspraksiser. Internasjonal politikk, 80(3): 350-374. DOI: http:77dx.doi.org/10.23865/intepol.v80.3577

    Stuvøy, K., & Shirobokova, I. (2021). Multiscalar entanglements in the post-socialist city: monotown restructuring, spatial re-ordering and urban inequality in Russia. Eurasian Geography and Economics, 63(5), 625–652. https://doi.org/10.1080/15387216.2021.1944246

    Stuvøy, K.; Bakonyi, J. & Chonka, P. (2021): Precarious spaces and violent site effects: Experiences from Hargeisa’s urban margins. Conflict, Security and Development, Vol. 21(2): 153-176.DOI: 10.1080/14678802.2021.1920230 (open access).

    Stuvøy, K. (2020): ‘“The Foreign Within”: State-Civil Society Relations in Russia’. Europe-Asia Studies, 72(7): 1103-1124 DOI: 10.1080/09668136.2020.1753658 (open access)

    Bakonyi, J.; Chonka, P. & Stuvøy, K. (2019): War and City-making in Somalia: Property, Power and Disposable Lives. Political Geography 73:82-91. DOI (Open access)

  • Teaching

    Introduction to International Relations, EDS203

    Feminist and Critical International Relations Theory, EDS381

    Global Transitions and the City, EDS383

    Master Thesis International Relations, M30-IR

  • Research and projects

    Research projects

    Research projects with a website outside NMBU