@ = article available online
Family and the welfare state
@Duvander,A.-Z. et al. (2010) Family policy and fertility: fathers’ and mothers’ use of parental leave and continued childbearing in Norway and Sweden, Journal of European Social Policy 20(1): 45-57 (12 p.) Full text
@Ellings?ter, A.L. & Gulbrandsen, L. (2007) Closing the child care gap: The interaction of childcare supply and mothers’ agency in Norway. Journal of Social Policy 36(4): 649-669 (21 p.) Full text
Ellings?ter, A.L. and A. Leira (eds) (2006) Politicising parenthood in Scandinavia. Gender relations in welfare states. Bristol: Policy Press, chapters 1-4,6, 9, 12 (161 p).
@Eydal, G. B. & Rostgaard, T. (2011) Gender Equality Revisited – Changes in Nordic Childcare Policies in the 2000s. Social Policy & Administration 45(2): 161-179. (18 p). Full text
@Fraser, N. (1994) After the Family Wage: Gender Equality and the Welfare State. Political Theory 22: 591-618 (28 p.) Full text
@Haas, L. & Rostgaard, T. (2011) Fathers’ right to parental leave in the Nordic countries: consequences for the gendered division of leave. Community, Work & Family 14(2): 177-195 (19 p.). Full text
@Hegewisch, A. & Gornick, J. C. (2011) The impact of work-family policy on employment: a review of research from OECD countries. Community, Work & Family 14(2): 119-135 (17 p.) Full text
@Hook, J. L. (2010) Gender Inequality in the Welfare State: Sex Segregation in Housework 1965-2003. American Journal of Sociology 115(5): 1480-1523 (44 p.). Full text
@McDonald, P. (2000) Gender equity, social institutions and the future of fertility. Journal of Population Research 17(1): 1-16 (16 s). Full text
@Thevenon, O. & Gauthier, A. H. (2011) Family policies in developed countries: a ‘fertility-booster’ with side effects. Community, Work & Family 14(2): 197-216 (20 p). Full text
356 p.
Family forms and practices: change and diversity
@Crompton, R. (2006) Class and family. The Sociological Review 54(4): 658-677 (20 p.). Full text
@Jensen, A.-M. & Clausen, S.-E. (2003) Children and family dissolution in Norway. The impact of Consensual Unions. Childhood 10(1): 65–81 (16 p.). Full text
@Kitter?d, R. H. (2002) Mother’s housework and childcare: Growing Similarities or Stable Inequalities? Acta Sociologica 45(2): 127-149. (22 p.) Full text
@Kitter?d, R. H. & Pettersen, S. (2006): Making up for mothers’ employed working hours? Housework and childcare among Norwegian fathers. Work, Employment and Society 20(3):473-492 (19 p). Full text
@Levin, Irene (2004) Living Apart Together: A New Family Form. Current Sociology 52(2): 223–240. (17 p.) Full text
@Mastekaasa, A, & Birkelund, G. E. (2011) The equality effect of wives earnings on inequalities in earnings among households. European Societies 13(2): 219-238 (20 p.) Full text
@Noack, T. (2001) Cohabitation in Norway - An increasingly common, and gradually accepted way of living, Int. J. of Law, Policy and the Family 15(1): 102-117 (15 p.) Full text
@Noack, T. et al (2005) A demographic analysis of registered partnerships (same-sex unions): The case of Norway", European Journal of Population 21(1): 89-109 (21 p.). Full text
@O'Brien, M., Brandth, B & Kvande, E. (2007) Fathers, work and family life. Community, Work and Family, 10(4): 375-386 (11 p.) Full text
@Plantin, Lars (2007): Different classes, different fathers? Community, Work & Family, 10:1, 93-110. (17 p.) Full text
@Skevik, A. (2006) “Absent fathers” or “reorganized families”? Variations in father-child contact after parental break-up in Norway. The Sociological Review 54(1): 114–132 (18 p.) Full text
@Syltevik, L. J. (2010) Sense and sensibility: cohabitation in ?cohabitation land?. The Sociological Review 58(3):444-462. (18p.) Full text
@Kitter?d, R. H and R?nsen, M (2012) Non-traditional dual earners in Norway: when does she work at least as much as he? Work, Employment and Society 26(4) 657–675. (18 p) Full text
232 p.
Intergenerational relationships
*Hagestad, Gunhild O. (2003). "Interdependent lives and relationships in changing times: a life-course view of families and aging." I R. Settersten (Ed.) Invitation to the life course. Toward a new understanding of later life. Amityville, NY: Baywood Publ., 135-159 (25 p.)
@Dykstra, P. A. & Fokkema, T. (2011). "Relationships between parents and their adult children: a West European typology of late-life families". I Ageing & Society, 31(4): 545-569 (25 p.). Full text
*Herlofson, K. & Hagestad, G.O. (2012). "Transformations in the role of grandparents across welfare states". I S. Arber & V. Timonen (Eds.) Contemporary grandparenting. Changing family relationships in global contexts. Bristol: The Polity Press, 27-50 (24p.).
@Bengston, V. L. (2001). "Beyond the nuclear family: the increasing importance of multigenerational bonds". Journal of Marriage and Family, 63(1): 1-16 (17 p.). Full text
91 p
Care in comparative perspective
@Bettio, F. and Plantenga, J. (2008) "Comparing Care Regimes in Europe". Feminist Economics. 10:1, 85-113. (28 p). Full text
@Ellings?ter, A.L (2009): "Leave policy in the Nordic welfare states: a‘recipe’ for high employment/high fertility?" in Community, Work & Family, 12:1, 1-19 (18 p.) Full text
@ Gornic . J. D. and Heron, A. (2006) "The regulation of working time as work-family reconciliation policy: Comparing Europe, Japan, and the United States". Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, Research and Practice Volume 8, Issue 2, 2006 Special Issue: Work-Family Reconciliation Policies: Theory and Practice, 149-166 (17 p) Full text
@Leitner, S. (2003) "Varieties of Familialism: The Caring Function of the Family in Comparative perspective". European Societies, 5:4, 353-375 (22 p). Full text
@Saraceno, C and Keck, W (2011) "Towards an integrated approach for the analysis of gender equity in policies supporting paid work and care responsibilities". Demographic Research, 2011, Vol.25, p.11 (38 p) Full text p
Total: 802 pages
Course curriculum information
Books are available at the bookstore Akademika at Blindern.
@ = articles that are available online through Bibsys' subscriptions on e-journal databases for employees and students. To access these articles it is necessary to use a computer in the UiO network. This is because the UiO subscription access is controlled by IP-address. To download the articles from computers outside the UiO network it is necessary to connect to the UiO network by VPN client.
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Available curriculum articles on the internet are an advantage in the sense that required reading will be available to the students sooner than compendiums, and the students may choose to read the text on the screen. Students pay for print-outs if exceeding their print quota, but this is also cheaper than printed compendium per page.