Integrerings- og mangfoldsdirektoratet | |
Government agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 2006 |
Jurisdiction | Government of Norway |
Headquarters | Oslo |
Employees | 237 |
Government agency executive |
|
Parent Government agency | Ministry of Justice and Public Security |
Website | www.imdi.no |
The Directorate of Integration and Diversity (Norwegian : Integrerings- og mangfoldsdirektoratet) is a Norwegian government agency which is responsible for implementing public policy concerning refugees and integration. It is subordinate to the Ministry of Justice and Public Security and was established in 2006. The directorate is headquartered in Oslo, and has offices in Bergen, Gjøvik, Kristiansand, Narvik, and Trondheim.
Geir Barvik is a Norwegian civil servant. He served as Managing Director of the Norwegian State Housing Bank from 2001 to 2010 and as Director-General of the Directorate of Integration and Diversity from 2010 to 2016. From 2016 he is a Director in the Ministry of Justice and Public Security.
The Royal Ministry of Justice and Public Security is a Norwegian government ministry that oversees justice, the police, and domestic intelligence. The main purpose of the ministry is to provide for the maintenance and development of the basic rule of law. An overriding objective is to ensure the security of society and of individual citizens. The ministry was founded in 1818 and currently employs about 400 people in the central government department. Its subordinate agencies include the Norwegian Police Service, the Norwegian Correctional Service, the Norwegian Police Security Service, the Norwegian Prosecuting Authority, the Judiciary of Norway, and the Directorate of Immigration, and employ around 30,000 people. The Ministry of Justice of Norway oversees the administration of justice in Svalbard.
In Norway, the Minister of Justice and Public Security is the head of the Royal Norwegian Ministry of Justice and the Police and a member of Government of Norway. The current minister is Emilie Enger Mehl.
Harald Smedal was a Norwegian politician of the Liberal Party. He served as a member of the Council of State Division in Stockholm from 1895 to 1896, Minister of Auditing from 1896 to 1897, and Minister of Justice from 1897 to 1898.
Bergen Public Library is a library building and public library institution in Bergen, Norway. Founded in 1872, it is the second largest public library in Norway. In addition to the main building in Bergen's city centre, Bergen Public Library operates nine branch offices and the library service in Bergen's two prisons.
Rieber may refer to:
Jack Erik Kjuus was a Norwegian far-right politician of the former White Electoral Alliance who was convicted of racism in 1997. The party Kjuus led was a merger between two anti-immigrant parties, Stop the Immigration and Hjelp de fremmede hjem ellers mister vi landet vårt.
Rune Bjerke is a Norwegian businessperson and politician for the Labour Party.
Libe Solberg Rieber-Mohn is a Norwegian civil servant and former politician for the Labour Party. She was appointed as Director-General of the Directorate of Integration and Diversity by the King-in-Council on 17 June 2016, succeeding Geir Barvik. She formerly served as a State Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion and as Deputy Mayor of Oslo.
Juul Bjerke was a Norwegian economist.
Georg Fredrik Rieber-Mohn is a Norwegian judge.
Hallvard Rieber-Mohn was a Norwegian Dominican priest and author.
Norwegian Prosecuting Authority is a body subordinate to the Norwegian Council of State.
LIBE or Libe may refer to:
Bernhard Getz was a Norwegian judge, professor, law reformer and Mayor of Oslo.
Mohn is a surname. The word in German means "poppy". Notable people with the surname include:
Rieber-Mohn is the surname of:
A special adviser or special advisor is a high-ranking civil servant in the Norwegian civil service with rank code (stillingskode) 1220 in the Norwegian state. The Ministry of Finance has stated that special advisers belong to the "highest career level" in government departments. Special advisers may be highly qualified experts or people with high-level experience from the government service, including former top executives of government agencies. The title is used in government departments, where special advisers are the single most highly paid category. The rank is also used in other parts of the civil service, including directorates and health trusts. In the Basic Collective Agreement (hovedtariffavtalen) for the Norwegian state, special advisers have the second highest minimum pay grade, ranking above all the director ranks and second only to a rarely used rank for the most senior attorneys with the Office of the Attorney General of Norway.
Christianssands Tidende was a conservative newspaper published in Kristiansand, Norway.
Tor-Aksel Busch is a Norwegian lawyer and government official. He served as Director of Public Prosecutions from 1997 to 2019.