Early academic career From 1990 to 1991, Hylland Eriksen was a research fellow at the
Peace Research Institute Oslo. Eriksen was promoted to Professor in 1995. During that time, CULCOM would bring together 120 people from five of the University of Oslo's faculties, and lead directly to the completion of 9 PhDs and 42 MAs, as well as several books and academic journal articles. Hylland Eriksen himself was directly involved with five of these CULCOM was awarded the University of Oslo's Research Communication Prize in 2010. Though CULCOM ended in 2010, it continued in a sense through a research project it helped launch
—The Alna Project—in 2009. Funded by the
Research Council of Norway, Hylland Eriksen and the Alna Project's interdisciplinary team, including journalist
Elisabeth Eide, studied integration and belonging in
Alna, a highly-diverse "
satellite city" in Oslo's
Grorud Valley. The project concluded in 2013. Focusing on environmental, economic, and cultural crises, Hylland Eriksen and his team conducted ethnographic fieldwork in various countries, including Australia, Peru, the Philippines, South Korea, Sierra Leone, Canada, the United Kingdom, Hungary, and Norway. In 2017, Hylland Eriksen received the University of Oslo Research Prize for his work on
Overheating. == Politics ==