Nordic Conference on Violent Extremism 2019 Expanding the ... · Chair: Mark Bang Kjeldgaard,...
Transcript of Nordic Conference on Violent Extremism 2019 Expanding the ... · Chair: Mark Bang Kjeldgaard,...
Nordic Conference on Violent Extremism 2019Expanding the Field: New Inter-disciplinary Perspectives and Questions
Programme
31 October - 1 November 2019Department of Political ScienceAarhus BSS, Aarhus University
Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University 3
ProgrammeThursday 31 October
08.30 – 9.30 Registration & breakfast, Nordre Ringgade 4, building 1412
09.30 – 09.45 Welcome, Lasse Lindekilde, Chair of RURPE & Karin Ingemann, Head ofDanish Centre for Prevention of Extremism, The Main Assembly Hall
09.45 – 10.30 Keynote speaker:John Horgan: “The Incel Rebellion: The Rise of Male Supremacy as a New Form of Terrorism?”, The Main Assembly Hall
10.30 – 10.45 Break
10.45 – 12.15 Session 1
12.15 – 13.15 Lunch
13.15 – 14.45 Session 2
14.45 – 15.00 Break
15.00 – 16.30 Session 3
16.30 – 16.45 Break
16.45 – 17.30 Keynote speaker:Sophia Moskalenko: “From martyrdom to revolution: mass radicalization in the age of social media”, The Main Assembly Hall
17.30 – 19.30 Reception, Vandrehallen & the Museum of Ancient Art
Friday 1 November
10.00 – 10.45 Keynote speaker:Michael Hogg: “Uncertainty and Intergroup Violence: Identification with Extremist Groups Reduces Self-Uncertainty and Facilitates Violence”, The Main Assembly Hall
10.45 – 11.00 Break
11.00 – 12.30 Session 4
12.30 – 13.30 Lunch
13.30 – 15.00 Session 5
15.00 – 15.15 Break
15.15 – 16.45 Session 6
Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University4 5
Paper sessions overviewThursday 31 October
Preben Hornung Mogens Zieler Richard Mortensen
SESSION 1 Thursday, October 31 10.45-12.15
Vigilante Street Patrols Against Migrants: Case Studies from Finland, Norway and Sweden Chair: Miroslav Mareš & Tore Bjørgo, Masaryk University & University of Oslo The Soldiers of Odin Finland: From a Local Movement to an International Franchise Tommi Kotonen, University of Jyväskylä Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing? The Taming of the Soldiers of Odin in Norway Tore Bjørgo, University of Oslo Pop-Up Vigilantism and Fascist Patrols in Sweden Mattias Gardell, Uppsala University
Radical Left Movements: Dynamics of Radicalization and De-radicalization Chair: Mattias Wahlström & Rune Ellefsen, University of Gothenburg & University of Oslo From Radical Counterculture to Pragmatic Radicalism? The Collective Identity of Contemporary Radical Left-libertarian Activism in Sweden Jan Jämte, Måns Lundstedt & Magnus Wennerhag, Örebro University, Scuola Normale Superiore, Florence, Södertörn University Preventing “left-wing extremism” at the local level: street-level bureaucrats’ interpretations and experiences of a recently established social problem Magnus Wennerhag & Kalle Eriksson, Södertörn University Experiencing soft repression: An activist phenomenology Jan Jämte & Rune Ellefsen, Örebro University & University of Oslo
Lone Actor Terrorism, Mental Disorder and the Counter Terror Vulnerability Hub Chair: Rita Augestad Knudsen, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs The “lone wolf” typology should be fundamentally reconsidered Paul Gill, Security and Crime Science, UCL Research into public figure threat assessment Frank Farnham, North London Forensic Service Multi agency public protection arrangements in the UK Richard Taylor, North London Forensic Service
Preben Hornung Mogens Zieler Richard Mortensen
SESSION 2 Thursday, October 31 13.15-14.45
Gender and Extremism Chair: Ann-Sophie Hemmingsen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Entanglements and affective power: Female-specific jihad propaganda’s potential to mobilize Sara Jul Jacobsen, Roskilde University Where There is Salafi-Jihadism, There is Always Also Honor-Related Social Control: Outlining the Intimate Terrorism and Terrorism Nexus Henriette Frees Esholdt & Mehmet Ümit Necef, Lund University & University of Southern Denmark Becoming a Tradwife: Female Alt-Right Influencers and Online Radicalization Eviane Leidig, University of Oslo Walking on egg shells. Defining feminine roles in Generation Identity. Daniela Pisoiu, Austrian Institute
Friction: State policies and terrorist groups Chair: Ayse Göksu, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism A Theoretical Approach on the Nexus Between Regime Securitization and Longevity of a Terrorist Group Naomi Theuri, Independent Researcher Bringing policy back: an experimental approach to perceptions of illegitimacy Steffen Selmer Andersen, Aarhus University Law vs. Justice – A Critical Discussion of Norwegian Terror Laws and Foreign Fighters Lars Gule, Oslo Metropolitan University Clandestinity as an Impediment to Insurgent Growth: The Spatial Dimensions of the M-19’s Popular Support Francis O’Connor, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt
Causes and Mechanisms of Radicalisation Chair: Rana Sérida, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism The Role of Socialization in Rejection, Radicalization, and Disengagement Uzair Ahmed, University of Oslo Globalization and Extremism: A Cross-National Study of Insecure Life Attachment and Attitudes toward Cultural Globalization in regard to Extremism Simon Ozer, Aarhus University What makes you so uncertain? Mapping personal uncertainty and its relation to extremism: a mixed-methods cross-country study Johan Gøtzsche-Astrup & Oluf Gøtzsche-Astrup, Aarhus University The Relationship between Intellect and Extremism: An open, intellectual mind set counteracts individuals’ support for extremist violence Milan Obeidi, Uppsala University
Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University6 7
Friday 1 November
Preben Hornung Mogens Zieler Conference Room 1 Richard Mortensen
SESSION 4 Friday, November 1 11.00-12.30
The Danish approach to prevention of extremism on national and local level Chair: Karin Ingemann, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Prevention on a national level Representatives from the Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Prevention in Aarhus Steffen Saigusa Nielsen & Thorleif Link, Aarhus Municipality Prevention in Copenhagen Representatives from Copenhagen Municipality
Between National, Transnational and International Islamism Chair: Mikkel Bøgeskov Eriksen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism What causes change in jihadist organizations? Strategy in the cases of the Sahelian and North African Jihad Bjarke Aae, Aarhus University Burning the Bridge: Recruitment and Indoctrination of Children in Northern Uganda by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) Kennedy Amone-P’Olak, University of Botswana The promotion of Sufism as 'moderate Islam' in the fight against Islamism: Promise and pitfalls. Mark Sedgwick, Aarhus University
The Role of Space and Place in Violent Extremism Chair: Chris Holmsted Larsen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism The Moral Ecology of Extremism: Evidence from a Comparative Community Survey Noémie Bouhana & Sandy Schumann, University College London The ’Where’ of Radicalization: The Social Ecology of Radicalization in Aarhus Mikkel Hjelt, Aarhus University Managing militant Islamism: A retrospective process-oriented perspective Rune Ellefsen, University of Oslo Documenting and explaining the spatial concentration of Radicalization Lasse Lindekilde, Aarhus University
Nordic Multiagency Approaches to Handling Extremism: Policies, Perceptions and Practices Chair: Tore Bjørgo, University of Oslo Mapping Policy and Legal Frameworks for Interagenvy Collaboration and Information Sharing Robin Andersson Malmros & Jennie Sivenbring, University of Gothenburg Perceptions of CVE Policies and the Willingness to Report Concerns of Radicalization to Authorities in the Nordic Countries Lasse Lindekilde, Oluf Gøtzsche-Astrup & Anna-Maria Fjellman, Aarhus University & Gothenburg University Practises in Interagency Collaboration against Violent Extremism at the City Level Randi Solhjell, Tore Bjørgo & Yngve Carlsson, Norwegian Police University College & Center for Research on Extremism (C-REX)
Preben Hornung Mogens Zieler Richard Mortensen
SESSION 3 Thursday, October 31 15.00-16.30
Emotions and Violent Extremism in New and Old Media Chair: Mark Bang Kjeldgaard, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Emotional cyber-extremism: Affective niches and violent radicalization Daniele Valentini, Osnabrück University Why so angry? Understanding hostility in online political discussions Alexander Bor & Michael Bang Petersen, Aarhus University Media Terrorism Reporting: A Front Line Practitioner’s Perspective Virginie Andre & Onni Sarvela, Victoria University & former exit mentor (Finland)
Far-right Ideologies, Mobilisation, and Development Chair: Chris Holmsted Larsen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Propaganda and conspiracy theories in extreme right ideologies Julian Richards & Rikke Alberg Peters, University of Buckingham & University College Lillebælt Movement Parties of the Far Right Organisation, Processes, and Mobilisation Pietro Castelli Gattinara & Andrea L. P. Pirro, University of Oslo & Scuola Normale Superiore, Florence How the extreme right terrorist threat has developed in the United Kingdom: A historical perspective Graham Macklin, Center for Research on Extremism (C-REX), Oslo University
Constructing Terrorism: Narratives and Discourses Chair: Malik Larsen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism The narrative construction of Danish foreign fighter returnees in the post-ISIS era Kathrine Elmose Jørgensen, University of Copenhagen The Norwegian Radicalization Discourse – a Radical Change in Norwegian Counterterrorism Discourses Sissel H. Jore, University of Stavanger Rap. Islam. Islamism: Notes on the articulation of Islam in hip-hop from the Five Percenters to Jihadism Sune Qvotrup Jensen & Jeppe Fuglsang Larsen, Aalborg University Exodus into extremism Stine Helding Rand & Christian Mogensen, Centre for Digital Youth Care
Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University8 9
Preben Hornung Mogens Zieler Richard Mortensen
SESSION 5 Friday, November 1 13.30-15.00
Online Political Hostility Chair: Anders Bo Christensen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Who disseminates fake news on social media? Individual-level predictors of fake news sharing on Twitter Mathias Osmundsen, Peter Bjerregaard, Anja Bechmann, Alexander Bor, & Michael Bang Petersen, Aarhus University & University of Southern Denmark Killing in the Name of IS: Eying Recruitment Effects of Credit-Taking using Twitter-Follower Data Tanja Marie Hansen, University of Southern Denmark From Massacre into Meme – Online Representations of the Christchurch Attack as a Video Game Daniel Sallamaa University of Helsinki
Far-right Violent Extremism: Trends and Research Agendas Chair: Katrina Gillmann, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Trend update: Right-wing terrorism and violence in Western Europe Jacob Aaland Ravndal, University of Oslo Terrorism Against Asylum-Seekers in Finland: What Happened in the Fall of 2015? Heikki A. Kovalainen, University of Helsinki How to Study Lack of Political Violence: Research Agenda and Conceptual Framework Leena Malkki, University of Helsinki
Extremism and Prevention in Education Chair: Stine Kjær Strohbach, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism A model for supporting Resilience, Democracy and Dialogue against Violent Radicalization and Extremism in the Finnish Educational Institutions Saija Benjamin & Pia Koirikivi, University of Helsinki Another Brick in the wall: The Hateful Other – neo-Nazis in school and teachers’ strategies for handling racism Christer Mattsson, University of Gothenburg Understanding Teacher Attitudes and Intentions towards Reporting Student Radicalisation David Parker, Lasse Lindekilde & Oluf Gøtzsche-Astrup, Aarhus University When counterterrorism enters the curriculum: How the global war on terror risks impairing good education Martin Sjøen, University of Stavanger
Preben Hornung Mogens Zieler Richard Mortensen
SESSION 6 Friday, November 1 15.15-16.45
Multiagency Local Prevention of Extremism Chair: Ann-Sophie Hemmingsen, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Policing extremists - The approach of the police in preventing violent extremism in local communities in Norway Ingvild Magnæs Gjelsvik, University of Oslo, Norwegian Police University College & Norwegian Institute of International Affairs In every artery of society? The frontline professional on presumptive screening of cases of violent extremism among youth Annemarie van de Weert & Quirine Eijkman, Utrecht University of Applied Sciences Taming a wicked problem? A research agenda for assessing local efforts to prevent violent extremism in Denmark and Norway Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen & Håvard Haugstvedt, University of Stavanger Ethical challenges in the field of cooperation between police, mental health services and local authorities Aslaug Kristiansen & Hans O. Ringereide, University of Agder
The Role and Attitudes of Intimates, Communities and the Public in Preventing Extremism Chair: Ayse Göksu, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism Understanding Public Intentions to Report Radicalisation: A cross-country analysis of the UK and Denmark David Parker, Lasse Lindekilde & Benjamin Smith, Aarhus University & University of California Santa Barbara Demobilizing or Activating? The Effect of Anti-Muslim Discrimination on Muslims’ Counter-Extremism Engagement Sadi Shanaah, Aarhus University Narrative Silence: Reflections on “Failed” Interviews with Relatives of Persons Involved in Salafi-Jihadism Henriette Frees Esholdt, Lund University
Right-wing extremism and prevention in Norway Chair: Rana Sérida, Danish Centre for Prevention of Extremism A European Declaration of Fascism? Henrik Kjölstad, Mid Sweden University Far-right Norwegian Twitter users: policy perceptions feed radicalization Anne Birgitta Nilsen, Oslo Metropolitan University The Rise of Cosmopolitan Racists? A Dual-Process Model of Increasingly Dissonant Intercultural Attitudes Nina Høy-Petersen, University of Oslo Back on the streets? Assessing contemporary Norwegian far right mobilization offline Anders Ravik Jupskås & Birgitte Haanshuus, Center for Research on Extremism (C-REX), University of Oslo
Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University10 11
AbstractsKeynote speakers
JOHN HORGANDistinguished University Professor, Department of Psychology, Georgia State University
Abstract“The Incel Rebellion: The Rise of Male Supremacy as a New Form of Terrorism?”
On 23 May 2014, 22-year-old Elliott Rodger killed 6 people and injured 14 more in a shooting and stabbing spree in Isla Vista, California. Rodger, who shot and killed himself before authorities could apprehend him, was a self-identified “Incel”, a member of an online movement describing its followers as “involuntarily celibate”. Incels are largely young, white males whose identity centers around frustration and rage directed against women. That rage is purportedly grounded in Incels’ real or imagined inability to find female romantic or sexual partners.
Further acts of public violence against women have recently shone a spotlight on Incels, though little is known about the broader movement and its relationship to those specific attackers. In this presentation, John Horgan offers a background and overview of the Incel ecosystem, its culture, language and terminology. Horgan considers Incel-related violence as a new and emerging kind of terrorism, and he examines the role of misogynistic world views in violent extremism more broadly.
MICHAEL HOGG (PhD, Bristol) is Professor and Chair of the Social Psychology Program at Claremont Graduate University, in Los Angeles, an Honorary Professor at the University of Kent, in the UK, and a former President of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology.
Abstract “Uncertainty and Intergroup Violence: Identification with Extremist Groups Reduces Self-Uncertainty and Facilitates Violence”
People need a clear sense of who they are. This allows them to understand the world and their place within it, and to configure their behavior and predict the be-havior of others. Self-uncertainty motivates uncertainty reduction, and one of the most powerful ways to reduce self-uncertainty is to identify with a distinctive social group or category that has a consensual, unambiguous and clearly defined collective identity. This idea has been developed by a social psychological theory, uncertain-ty-identity theory, which explores the motivational role of self-uncertainty in social identity processes and associat-ed group dynamics and intergroup relations. The analysis has significant implications for our understanding of the social psychology of radicalization and violent extrem-
ism. It describes how self-uncertainty, particularly when viewed as a self-threat, strengthens preference for and identification with xenophobic groups that are intolerant of internal dissent and have autocratic leaders. In this talk I describe the key features of uncertainty-identity theory in order to focus primarily on its account of radicalization, internalization of extremist ideologies and identities, and support for autocratic populist leadership. Based on this analysis I suggest some general social psychological considerations that might reduce people’s vulnerability to radicalization and violent extremism.
SOPHIA MOSKALENKO Adjunct Professor, University of Pennsylvania. She also received her Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Pennsylvania in 2004.
Abstract “From martyrdom to revolution: mass radicalization in the age of social media”
Martyrs can move sympathizers to activism, self-sacri-fice and radical political action, as did Ten Men Dead in Northern Ireland, Gandhi in India, Mandela in South Africa, and Martin Luther King in the U.S. A true martyr’s victimization despite his innocence marks his persecutors as immoral, his courage despite the odds marks his cause as noble, and together these combine into a moving and mobilizing example for followers. We distinguish martyrs from heroes and victims, and show why some martyrs have powerful political impact while most do not. Ele-ments of a viral martyrdom narrative include Gathering
Clouds, Prophecy, Underdog, Mentor, True Friend, Right Choices, and Enemy Within.
The Arab Spring brought to the front pages of Western newspapers stories of people who were hailed as martyrs, including a Tunisian self-immolator who started the Arab Spring and an unintended victim of the Iranian regime’s crackdown on the Green revolution. We consider the psychological effects and the political pitfalls of invoking the power of martyrdom.
People need a clear sense of who they are. This allows them to understand the world and their place within it, and to configure their behavior and predict the be-havior of others. Self-uncertainty motivates uncertainty reduction, and one of the most powerful ways to reduce self-uncertainty is to identify with a distinctive social group or category that has a consensual, unambiguous and clearly defined collective identity. This idea has been developed by a social psychological theory, uncertain-ty-identity theory, which explores the motivational role of self-uncertainty in social identity processes and associat-ed group dynamics and intergroup relations. The analysis has significant implications for our understanding of the social psychology of radicalization and violent extrem-
ism. It describes how self-uncertainty, particularly when viewed as a self-threat, strengthens preference for and identification with xenophobic groups that are intolerant of internal dissent and have autocratic leaders. In this talk I describe the key features of uncertainty-identity theory in order to focus primarily on its account of radicalization, internalization of extremist ideologies and identities, and support for autocratic populist leadership. Based on this analysis I suggest some general social psychological considerations that might reduce people’s vulnerability to radicalization and violent extremism.
MICHAEL HOGG (PhD, Bristol) is Professor and Chair of the Social Psychology Program at Claremont Graduate University, in Los Angeles, an Honorary Professor at the University of Kent, in the UK, and a former President of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology.
Abstract “Uncertainty and Intergroup Violence: Identification with Extremist Groups Reduces Self-Uncertainty and Facilitates Violence”
JOHN HORGANDistinguished University Professor, Department of Psychology, Georgia State University
Abstract“The Incel Rebellion: The Rise of Male Supremacy as a New Form of Terrorism?”
SOPHIA MOSKALENKO Adjunct Professor, University of Pennsylvania. She also received her Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Pennsylvania in 2004.
Abstract “From martyrdom to revolution: mass radicalization in the age of social media”
Martyrs can move sympathizers to activism, self-sacri-fice and radical political action, as did Ten Men Dead in Northern Ireland, Gandhi in India, Mandela in South Africa, and Martin Luther King in the U.S. A true martyr’s victimization despite his innocence marks his persecutors as immoral, his courage despite the odds marks his cause as noble, and together these combine into a moving and mobilizing example for followers. We distinguish martyrs from heroes and victims, and show why some martyrs have powerful political impact while most do not. Ele-ments of a viral martyrdom narrative include Gathering
Clouds, Prophecy, Underdog, Mentor, True Friend, Right Choices, and Enemy Within.
The Arab Spring brought to the front pages of Western newspapers stories of people who were hailed as martyrs, including a Tunisian self-immolator who started the Arab Spring and an unintended victim of the Iranian regime’s crackdown on the Green revolution. We consider the psychological effects and the political pitfalls of invoking the power of martyrdom.
On 23 May 2014, 22-year-old Elliott Rodger killed 6 people and injured 14 more in a shooting and stabbing spree in Isla Vista, California. Rodger, who shot and killed himself before authorities could apprehend him, was a self-identified “Incel”, a member of an online movement describing its followers as “involuntarily celibate”. Incels are largely young, white males whose identity centers around frustration and rage directed against women. That rage is purportedly grounded in Incels’ real or imagined inability to find female romantic or sexual partners.
Further acts of public violence against women have recently shone a spotlight on Incels, though little is known about the broader movement and its relationship to those specific attackers. In this presentation, John Horgan offers a background and overview of the Incel ecosystem, its culture, language and terminology. Horgan considers Incel-related violence as a new and emerging kind of terrorism, and he examines the role of misogynistic world views in violent extremism more broadly.
Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University Department of Political Science, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University12 13
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F
G
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J
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1582
1585
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1591
1523
1521
1137
1135
1141
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1213 1211
1161
1163
1181
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14231422
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Kultur og Samfund
Kultur og Samfund
Æstetik og KommunikationErhvervskommunikation
Undervisningsudvikling og Digitale Medier
Æstetik og Kommunikation
Geoscience
Geoscience
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Ingeniør-videnskab
Ingeniørvidenskab
Ingeniør-videnskab
Ingeniør-videnskab
Folkesundhed
Ingeniør-videnskab
Kemi
Fysik og Astronomi
Matematik
Bioscience
Kemi
Matematik
Datalogi
Geoscience
Bioscience
Folke-sundhed
Folkesundhed
Folkesundhed
Odontologi
Skolen for Klinikassistenter, Tandplejere og Kliniske Tandteknikere
Odontologi
Odontologi
Klinisk Medicin
Klinisk Medicin
Klinisk Medicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Molekylær-biologi
Genetik
Statskundskab
Psykologi
Psykologi
Økonomi
Jura Marketing og Organisation
iNANO
Zuse
Stibitz
DreyerBabbage
IT Huset
Benj
amin
Bush
AdaTuring
Chomsky
Schön
Edison Shannon
Stakladen
Bartholin
Adorno
Statsbiblioteket
Kasernen
Kasernescenen
Antikmuseet
Aula
Kollegier
Kollegier
Kollegiekontor
Nyg
aard
Wiener
Fred
riksh
us
Hopper
Gæstehuset
Steno Museet
Dale T. MortensenInternationalt Center
Søauditorierne
Tandlægeskolen
Victor Albeck
Naturhistorisk Museum
Væksthusene
46404641
Søren Frichs Vej
Valhalvej
Herm
odsvej
ÅrhusUniversitets-hospitalINCUBA Science Park
UniversitetsledelsenDekanater
BotaniskHave
Universitets-forlaget
Nobelparken
Katrinebjerg
Storcenter Nord
VIA
Aarhus Universitet 12-02-2013
InformationscentretAU StudieadministrationAU KommunikationAU Viden
AU IT
AU Forskning og Talent
AU Økonomi og Planlægning
AU IT
AU IT
AU HR
Trøjborg Centret
Niels Juels Gade
Willem
oesg
ad
e
Kirkegård
svej
Ald
ersro
vej
Frederiks A
lle
Valdemarsgade
Thomas Jensens Alle
Skt. Nicolaus Gade
Nordre Ringgade
Nordre Ringgade
Nø
rreb
rog
ad
e
Carl Holst-Knudse
ns Vej
Vennelyst Boulevard
Høegh-Guldbergs G
ade
C. F
. M
øllers A
llé
Wilhelm Meyers Allé
Ole W
orms A
llé
Victor Albecks Vej
Gustav Wieds Vej
Lang
elan
dsga
de
Ny M
unkega
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Paludan-M
üllers Vej
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rl Verne
rs Ve
j
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roe
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de
Ba
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nde
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Vestre Ringgade
Ærøgade
Emil Aarestrups Vej
Jens Chr. Skous Vej
Niels Jense
ns Ve
j
Fredrik Nielsens Vej
Tåsingegade
Langelandsgade
Finl
ands
gade
Helsingforsgade
Katrinebjergvej
Møl
leva
ngs A
llé
Paludan-Müllers V
ej
Åboga
de
Jens Baggesens Vej
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Lang
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dsga
de
Fugl
esan
gs A
llé 4. Maj Kollegiet
Viborgvej
Vestre Ringgade
Ingerslevs Blvd.
Da
lga
s Avenue
N. J. Fjord
s Ga
de
N. J. Fjords Gade
Adm. og stud. center for Arts og BSS
Adm. og stud. center for Science and Technology
Adm. og stud. center forHealth
0 100 200 300 meter
N
3120
3140 3130
1590
14301420 1440
1410
1360
1320
13401330
1350
1240
12601110
1090
1610
1230
1220
1210
1120
1100
1130
1150
1140
1520
1530
1550
1540
1580
1510
1160
1180
1170
1250
1190
1310
1670
1630
3110
5220
5350
5340
1650
5420
5620
2110
5510
5530
2630 2620
B
A
CM
DH
EF
GP
S
U
R
I
L
K
2640
2610
3610
3410
3430
3420
5345
5795
5794
534453
43
5342
5427
5533
5128
5132
5365
5366
5363
5177
5008
589C
5789
5126
53525346
5347
5341
5104
5106
5102
5335
5361
5360
P1ABC
D
P2
P3
1445
1448
1447
1414
1412 1325
1265
5125
5124
5123
2628
2635
2632
B
A
CD
E
F
G
HL
J
K
1582
1585
1586
1584
1581
1591
1523
1521
1137
1135
1141
1212
1213 1211
1161
1163
1181
1182
1185
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14231422
1431
1421
1413
1411
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1342
13281327
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1322
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3132
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6 1
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2117
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2626
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3421
3422
3424
3431
3433
3434
3435
3425
3423
5511
5522
5524
5521
5532
5531
5221
Kultur og Samfund
Kultur og Samfund
Æstetik og KommunikationErhvervskommunikation
Undervisningsudvikling og Digitale Medier
Æstetik og Kommunikation
Geoscience
Geoscience
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Molekylærbiologiog Genetik
Ingeniør-videnskab
Ingeniørvidenskab
Ingeniør-videnskab
Ingeniør-videnskab
Folkesundhed
Ingeniør-videnskab
Kemi
Fysik og Astronomi
Matematik
Bioscience
Kemi
Matematik
Datalogi
Geoscience
Bioscience
Folke-sundhed
Folkesundhed
Folkesundhed
Odontologi
Skolen for Klinikassistenter, Tandplejere og Kliniske Tandteknikere
Odontologi
Odontologi
Klinisk Medicin
Klinisk Medicin
Klinisk Medicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Biomedicin
Molekylær-biologi
Genetik
Statskundskab
Psykologi
Psykologi
Økonomi
Jura Marketing og Organisation
iNANO
Zuse
Stibitz
DreyerBabbage
IT Huset
Benj
amin
Bush
AdaTuring
Chomsky
Schön
Edison Shannon
Stakladen
Bartholin
Adorno
Statsbiblioteket
Kasernen
Kasernescenen
Antikmuseet
Aula
Kollegier
Kollegier
Kollegiekontor
Nyg
aard
Wiener
Fred
riksh
us
Hopper
Gæstehuset
Steno Museet
Dale T. MortensenInternationalt Center
Søauditorierne
Tandlægeskolen
Victor Albeck
Naturhistorisk Museum
Væksthusene
46404641
Søren Frichs Vej
Valhalvej
Herm
odsvej
ÅrhusUniversitets-hospitalINCUBA Science Park
UniversitetsledelsenDekanater
BotaniskHave
Universitets-forlaget
Nobelparken
Katrinebjerg
Storcenter Nord
VIA
Aarhus Universitet 12-02-2013
InformationscentretAU StudieadministrationAU KommunikationAU Viden
AU IT
AU Forskning og Talent
AU Økonomi og Planlægning
AU IT
AU IT
AU HR
Trøjborg Centret
Niels Juels Gade
Willem
oesg
ad
e
Kirkegård
svej
Ald
ersro
vej
Frederiks A
lle
Valdemarsgade
Thomas Jensens Alle
Skt. Nicolaus Gade
Nordre Ringgade
Nordre Ringgade
Nø
rreb
rog
ad
e
Carl Holst-Knudse
ns Vej
Vennelyst Boulevard
Høegh-Guldbergs G
ade
C. F
. M
øllers A
llé
Wilhelm Meyers Allé
Ole W
orms A
llé
Victor Albecks Vej
Gustav Wieds Vej
Lang
elan
dsga
de
Ny M
unkega
deKaserneboulevarden
Paludan-M
üllers Vej
Ka
rl Verne
rs Ve
j
Trøjborgvej
Pete
r Sab
roe
s Ga
de
Ba
rtholins A
llé
Ra
nde
rsvej
Vestre Ringgade
Ærøgade
Emil Aarestrups Vej
Jens Chr. Skous Vej
Niels Jense
ns Ve
j
Fredrik Nielsens Vej
Tåsingegade
Langelandsgade
Finl
ands
gade
Helsingforsgade
Katrinebjergvej
Møl
leva
ngs A
llé
Paludan-Müllers V
ej
Åboga
de
Jens Baggesens Vej
Møllevejen
Lang
elan
dsga
de
Fugl
esan
gs A
llé 4. Maj Kollegiet
Viborgvej
Vestre Ringgade
Ingerslevs Blvd.
Da
lga
s Avenue
N. J. Fjord
s Ga
de
N. J. Fjords Gade
Adm. og stud. center for Arts og BSS
Adm. og stud. center for Science and Technology
Adm. og stud. center forHealth
Map of venues Practical information
AU Conference Center
Ambulatory (Vandrehal)
The Main Assembly Hall
Underground passage
AU-Guest – wireless network for guestsGuests at AU who need wireless network access can use the AU-Guest network.
1. Turn WIFI on (on your mobile, tablet or PC) under Settings.2. Select the AU-Guest network.3. Open a web browser, for example Safari, Internet Explorer or Google Chrome.
A login website will automatically appear. If the login website does not appear, please write www.au.dk in the browser.
4. Log on to the internet by using one of the accounts below:
Facebook Google Drive LinkedIn SMS Microsoft account (for example outlook.dk, hotmail.com)
If you click the AU logo, a new website will appear. From this website, you can download the installation software for eduroam.
AU-Guest access is for the internet only. AU-Guest does not provide access to internal services such as file and print servers.
Underground PassageThere is a direct underground passage between the conference center and the The Main Assambly Hall on the opposite side of Ringgaden.
LunchLunch will be served in in Stakladen - the canteen in the Conference Center.
Department of Political Science Aarhus BSS, Aarhus UniversityBartholins Allé 108000 Aarhus C
ps.au.dk