I Welfare state and gender equality
@Daly, M. (2011) What adult worker model? A Critical Look at Recent Social Policy Reform in Europe from a Gender and Family Perspective. Social Politics 18(1): 1-23. (24p.). Full text
@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. 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).
@Ellings?ter, A.L. (2013) Scandinavian welfare states and gender (de)segregation – trends and processes. Economic and Industrial Democracy 34(3): 501-518 (18 p.) Full text
@Ellings?ter, A.L. & E. Pedersen (2015) Institutional trust: Family policy and fertility in Norway, Social Politics,doi: 10.1093/sp/jxv003, p. 1-23 (23 p.). Full text
@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
@Eydal, G.B. et al. (2015) Trends in parental leave in the Nordic countries: has the forward march of gender equality halted? Community, Work & Family 18(2): 167-181 (15 p.). Full text
@Keck, W. & Saraceno, C. (2013) The impact of different social-policy frameworks on social inequalities among women in the EU: the labour market participation of mothers. Social Politics 20(3): 297-328 (32 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
@Skevik, A.G. (2014) A review of family demographics and family policy in the Nordic countries, Baltic Journal of Political Science, no. 3.: 50-66 (17 p.) 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.
II Family forms and practices: change and diversity
@Brandth, B. & E. Kvande (2015) Fathers and flexible leave. Work, employment and society, DOI: 10.1177/0950017015590749 (16 p.). Full text
@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. and R?nsen, M. (2013) Opting out? Who are the housewives in contemporary Norway? European Sociological Review, advance access (14p.) 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
@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
@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. 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
@Raley, S., Bianchi, S.M. & Wang, W (2012): When Do fathers Care? Mothers' Economic Contribution and Fathers' Involvement in Child Care. American Journal of Sociology, 117 (5): 1422-59 (38 p.) Full text
@R?nsen, M. & H. Kitter?d (2015) Gender-Equalizing Family Policies and Mothers' Entry into Paid Work: Recent Evidence From Norway. Feminist Economics 21(1): 59-89 (21 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
@Stefansen, K. & Farstad, G. (2010) Classed parental practices in a modern welfare state: Caring for the under threes in Norway. Critical Social Policy 30(1): 120-141 (22 p.). Full text
@Syltevik, L.J (2014): Cohabitation from illegal to institutionalized practice: the case of Norway 1972-2010. The History of the Family (16 p.) Full text
259 p.
III Families and personal relationships
@Bjerrum Nielsen, H & Rudberg, M (2007) Fun in Gender – Youth and Sexuality, Class and Generation. NORA 15(2-3): 100-113 (14 p.). Full text
@Brannen, J. & Nilsen, A. (2005) Individualisation, choice and structure: a discussion of current trends in sociological analysis. The Sociological Review 53(3): 412-428(17p.). Full text
@Duncan, S ( 2011) The world we have made? Individualisation and personal life in the 1950s. The Sociological Review 59(2): 242-265 (24 p.). Full text
@Forsberg, L. (2007) Negotiating involved fatherhood: Houshold work, childcare and spending time with children. NORMA(2(2): 109-126 (18 p.). Full text
@Magnusson, E. (2008): The Retoric of Inequality: Nordic Women and Men Argue against Sharing House-work. NORA 16 (2): 79-95 (17p.) Full text
@Roseneil, S. & Budgeon, S. (2004) Cultures of Intimacy and Care Beyond “the Family”: Personal Life and Social Change in the Early 21st Century”. Current Sociology 52 (2):135-159. (25 p.) Full text
@Rudberg, M & Bjerrum Nielsen, H (2012) The making of a ‘new man’: Psychosocial change in a generational context. Journal of Psycho-Social Studies 6(1): 55-71 (17 p.). Full tekst
@Smart, C. (2011) Families, Secrets and Memories. Sociology 45(4): 539-553 (15p.). Full text
@Usdansky, M. L (2011)The Gender-Equality Paradox: Class and Incongruity Between Work-Family Attitudes and Behaviors. Journal of Family Theory & Review 3 pp.163–178 (16 p). Full text
@Widerberg, K. (2010) In the Homes of Others: Exploring New Sites and Methods When investigating the Doings of Gender, Class and Ethnicity. Sociology 44(6): 1181-1196 (16 p). Full text
@Wiik, K.A. et al. (2009) A study of commitment and relationship quality in Sweden and Norway, Journal of Marriage and Family 71(3): 465-477. (13p.) Full text
@Aarseth, H. (2007) Between Labour and Love: The Re-erotization of Home-making in Egalitarian Couples within a Nordic Context. NORA 15(2): 133 – 143. (11p.). Full text
203 p.
Total: 818 p.
Course curriculum information
Books are available at the bookstore Akademika at Blindern.
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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.