By Hanna Ahlström, University of Oslo
18 January 2019, Sustainability - Open Access Journal
By Hanna Ahlström, University of Oslo
18 January 2019, Sustainability - Open Access Journal
By Heidi Rapp Nilsen, NTNU, Beate Sjåfjell, University of Oslo and Benjamin J. Richardsson, University of Tasmania
January 2019, Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung
According to the professors Beate Sjåfjell and Anita Halvorssen, the government must let the oil and the gas in the Arctic stay in the ground, if Norway is to comply with its national and international environmental commitments.
Juan Carlos Ochoa-Sanchez, “The Roles and Powers of the OECD National Contact Points regarding Complaints on an Alleged Breach of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises by a Transnational Corporation,” The Nordic Journal of International Law, Volume 84, Issue 1, 2015, pp. 89 – 126, DOI: 10.1163/15718107-08401006.
Norway is one of the most egalitarian countries with a high level of gender equality and a high percentage of women at work. Nevertheless, as shown in this article, mandatory rules appeared necessary to bring about the desired change in the composition of the Boards.
The article of Błażej Kuźniacki, PhD Research Fellow at the Department of Public and International ( a member of the Research Group Companies, Markets, Society and the Environment) titled "EEA Exemption from Norwegian CFC rules" that was published in the Norwegian tax journal Skatterett 3/2014, pp. 260–302 is nominated for the price "The Article of the Year - 2014" of the Universitetsforlaget.