Syllabus/achievement requirements

* = the article is in the course compendium

@ = the article is available online

It is also possible to loan books (short term) at The University of Oslo Library

Scandinavian Welfare states and social inequality

  • @ Jensen, Carsten and Gert Tinggaard Svendsen (2009) “Giving money to strangers: European welfare states and social trust” International Journal of Social Welfare, vol. 20:3-9. Available online

  • @ Birkelund, Gunn Elisabeth (2006). "Welfare states and social inequality: Key issues in contemporary cross-national research on social stratification and mobility". Research in Social Stratification and Mobility. 24(4), s 333- 351. (29 pages) Available online

  • @ Mandel, H. and Shalev, M. (2009). "How Welfare States Shape the Gender Pay Gap: A Theoretical and Comparative Analysis, Social Forces", 87, 1873-1911. (38 pages) Available online

  • @ Blackburn, R. M., Jarman, J. and Brooks, B. (2000). "The puzzle of gender segregation and inequality: A cross-national analysis". European Sociological Review, 16, 119-135. (16 pages) Available online

Family, Work and Gender Equality: Politicising Parenthood in Scandinavia

  • @ Fraser, Nancy (1994) “After the family wage: gender equity and the welfare state”, Political Theory, 44 (4), pp. 591-618 [27]. Available online

  • *Leira, Arnlaug (2006) "Parenthood change and policy reform in Scandinavia, 1970s-2000s", Ch. 2 in Ellings?ter, Anne Lise og Arnlaug Leira (eds), Politicising Parenthood in Scandinavia. Gender relations in welfare states. Bath: Policy Press. Pp. 27-52 [25].

  • *Kap 12 in A.L. Ellings?ter & A. Leira (eds) Politicising parenthood in Scandinavia. Bristol: Policy Press (pp. 265-277)

  • @ 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. Available online

Comparative European demography: Fertility woes and family changes

  • @ Coleman, D. 2006. "Europe's demographic future: Determinants, Dimensions and Challenges", Population and Development Review 32(S1): 52-95 (43p) Available online

  • Cooke, L.P. et al 2011 "Labor & Love: Employment and Divorce Risk in 11 Countries", Under journal review. (approx. 30p) NB! Will be handed out in class.

  • @ 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 (12p) Available online

  • @ Goldstein, J. et al 2003. "The emergence of sub-replacement fertility ideals in Europe", Population Research and Policy Review 22(4): 479-496. (17p) Available online

  • @ Hoem, J.M. 2005. "Why does Sweden have such high fertility?", Demographic Research 13(22): 559-572. (13p) Available online

  • @ Kiernan K.2004. "Unmarried cohabitation and parenthood in Europe", Law & Policy 26(1):33-55. (22p) Available online

  • Lyngstad, T.H. Lecture notes on basic demographic measures (5-10p) NB! Will be handed out in class

  • @ Noack, T. 2001. "Cohabitation - an accepted and increasingly regulated way of living", International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family 15(1): 102-117 (15p) Available online

  • @ Lutz et al. 2003. "Europe's population at a turning point", Science 299:1991-1992 (2p) Available online

  • @ Rindfuss, R.R. et al. 2011. "Child-Care Availability and Fertility in Norway" 36(4): 725-748. (23p) Available online

  • @ Sobotka T. 2010. "Shifting Parenthood to Advanced Reproductive Ages: Trends, Causes and Consequences" in Tremmel, J. (Ed.) A Young Generation Under Pressure?. Berlin-Heidelberg: Springer Verlag. (25p) Available online

Historical background and overview of the Nordic models of socio-economic development

  • * Alestalo, Matti & Stein Kuhle (1987): "The Scandinavian Route: Economic, Social, and Political Developments in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden". In: Erikson, R., E.J. Hansen, S. Ringen, H. Uusitalo eds.: The Scandinavian Model: Welfare States and Welfare Research. M.E. Sharpe: Armonk-London, pp. 3-38. [35 pages]

  • * Mj?set, Lars (2003). “Norden in the European state system. A presentation of Einar Maseng’s forgotten analysis”, in Ralf Eriksson, Markus J?ntti & Johan Willner, editors, Att f?rst? och f?r?ndra v?rlden: En festskrift f?r Jan Otto Andersson, ?bo Akademis F?rlag, Turku 2003, pp. 161-206. [46 pages]

  • * Kuhnle, Stein (2009). "The Nordic Model: Ambiguous, but Useful Concept" in Herbert Obinger, Elmar Rieger (Hg.) Wohlfahrtsstaatlichkeit in entwickelten Demokratien: Herausforderungen, Reformen und Perspektiven, Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag, 2009: 275-294. [19 pages]

Young adult immigrants' experiences of exclusion and inclusion in school and in access to higher education: Norway and Sweden as contrasted to Estonia and France

  • * Fangen, Katrine (2010) "Social Exclusion and Inclusion of Young Immigrants – Presentation of an Analytical Framework", Nordic Journal of Youth Research, 18(2): 133-156 (23 pages)

  • * Fangen, Katrine and Ferdinand Andreas Mohn (2010) "Norway: The Pitfalls of Egalitarianism" in: Fangen, Katrine; Fossan, Kirsten and Mohn, Ferdinand Andreas (eds.) Inclusion And Exclusion of Young Adult Migrants in Europe: Barriers and Bridges. Surrey: Ashgate (35 pages)

  • * Strompl, Judit; Kaldur, Kristjan and Anna Markina (2011) "Chapter 4: Pathways in Education" in Fangen, Katrine; Johansson, Thomas and Hammarén, Nils (eds.) (2011), Young Migrants: Exclusion and Belonging in Europe. Palgrave Macmillan (38 pages)

Cultural policy and democracy in Scandinavia

  • @ Duelund, Peter (2008): "Nordic cultural policies: A critical view" International Journal of Cultural Policy 14(1): 7-24. Available online

  • @ Larsen, H?kon (2011): "Public Service Broadcasting as an Object for Cultural Policy in Norway and Sweden. A Policy Tool and an End in Itself", Nordicom Review 32(2): 35-47. Available online

Equality and power in working life

  • @ Espen L?ken and Torgeir Aarvaag Stokke (2009) Labour Relations in Norway. Oslo: Fafo report 2009-33 (50 pages) Available online

  • * Engelstad, Fredrik (2004), “Democracy at work? Does Democracy in Working Life Make Sense in the 21st Century?” In F. Engelstad and ?.?sterud, eds., Power and Democracy. Critical Interventions. Aldershot: Ashgate (25 pages)

  • * Gulbrandsen, Trygve and Ursula Hoffmann-Lange (2007), "Consensus or Polarization? Business and labor Elites in Germany and Norway" Comparative Social Research, 23:103-135. (33 pages)

Immigration and the Nordic welfare state. Citizenship policies in Scandinavia

  • * Brochmann, Grete and Knut Kjeldstadli 2008. A history of immigration. The case of Norway 900-2000. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. pp 201-212, 223- 235 and pp 267-296 (23+29)

  • * Hagelund, Anniken and G. Brochmann 2009. “From rights to duties? Welfare and citizenship for immigrants and refugees in Scandinavia”. In Patrick Baert, Sokratis Koniordos, Giovanna Procacci and Carlo Ruzza (eds.) Conflict, Citizenship and Civil Society. London/New York: Routledge. pp 141-161 (20)

  • @ Brochmann, Grete and I. Seland 2010. “Citizenship Policies and Ideas of Nationhood in Scandinavia”. Citizenship Studies, vol 14, no 4. Pp 429-445 (16) Available online

Drugs, crime and ethnicity in a welfare state context

  • S. Sandberg & W. Pedersen: Street capital, Polity Press, paperback edition, 2011. chapters 1, 2, 3, 8. (approx. 80 pages)

Equality and inequality in the Norwegian labour market

  • * Dolton, P., Asplund, R. and Barth, E. (2009). "Education, wage inequality and the labour market". In: Dolton, P., Asplund, R. and Barth, E. (eds.) Education and Inequality Across Europe, pp. 1-23. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar. (23 pages)

  • @ Hansen, M. N. (2010). "Change in intergenerational economic mobility in Norway: conventional versus joint classifications of economic origin", Journal of Economic Inequality, 8, 133-151. (18 pages). Available online

  • @ Mastekaasa, A. (2004). "Social origins and recruitment to Norwegian business and public sector elites". European Sociological Review, 20, 221-235. (15 pages) Available online

Course material information

Books on the syllabus will be available at the bookstore Gnist Akademika at Blindern. The course compendium will be available at Kopiutsalget in the basement of the bookstore. Please bring your student card.

@ - articles

@ = articles are available online through Bibsys' subscriptions on e-journal databases for employees and students. To access the 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.

Some ejournal databases do not facilitate a direct link to the PDF-file. In such cases the link leads to the issue-index or the journal from where the correct article can be located and downloaded.

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.

Published Mar. 28, 2012 9:22 AM - Last modified May 23, 2012 5:04 PM