The Swedish Model: What, why and whereto? Lars Niklasson, Associate Professor Political Science Linköping University, Sweden.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Contemporary Islamic Studies at University of Aberdeen? Dr Gabriele Marranci Religious Studies.
Advertisements

2012 Course Selection Information For Ms. Barbens Students Her analysis and recommendations.
September 2012 –Partners Meeting Introduction Managing workforce change: Strengthening public services social dialogue in an era of austerity.
PO 111: INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN POLITICS Summer I (2014) Claire Leavitt Boston University.
Sino-Finnish Learning Garden:
The Swedish Model: What, why and whereto? Lars Niklasson, Associate Professor Political Science Linköping University, Sweden.
The Making of Welfare States Post world war 2 settlements.
The welfare state and middle class political dominance The Finnish Academy of Science and Letters Centennial Celebration Seminar in Social Sciences Helsinki.
Political Culture and Socialization (System Level)
The Swedish welfare state reinventing itself: is devolution out and centralism in (again)? Presentation at Boston University, February 16, 2011 by Lars.
General Education Revision. Mission & Purpose Mission Rooted in the tradition of liberal arts education, FGCU’s General Education Program provides students.
LS504: Applied Research in Legal Studies Unit 1
Learning Community II Survey Spring 2007 Analysis by Intisar Hibschweiler (Core Director) and Mimi Steadman (Director of Institutional Assessment)
Governance and Change in Higher Education MPhil in Higher Education Module 2 Unit 1 Oslo, 13 March 2006.
Component-Based Software Development: Nurturing the Inner Designers Hoang Bao CSC 509 – Winter 2005.
The Scandinavian Welfare State Historical Origins 1890s-1930s Electorate and Parliament Political Principles Political-Economic Structure Culture of the.
 AP European History.  Most philosophes believed that benevolent absolutism was the best option for improving society  Critical thinking turned the.
 Introduction to politicsLars Niklasson  Education and trainingLars Niklasson  Governance & privatizationBo Persson  Legitimacy & efficiencyLars Niklasson.
The Swedish Model: What, why and whereto? Lars Niklasson, Associate Professor Political Science Linköping University, Sweden.
COMM 330: Critical Issues in Mass Communication Introduction.
Research Statement Motivating Your Research in Five Sentences.
GOAL: TOWARDS IMPROVING HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE PHILIPPINES DR. NELIA A. ALIBIN International Forum for Education 2020 Leadership Institute East-West Center.
What’s a Nice Law Professor Like You Doing at a Conference Like This? Katherine J. Strandburg Albert B. Engelberg Professor New York University School.
Reconciling institutional theory with organizational theories How neoinstitutionalism resolves five paradoxes? Ms.Chanatip Dansirisanti ( 陳美清 ) MA2N0204.
From Mercantilism to Neoliberalism and Back Again? Shifting Policy Paradigms in EU Industrial Policy Lars Niklasson, Associate Professor in Political Science,
1 The Nordic Welfare State and Social Cohesion Christian Albrekt Larsen Professor, Centre for Comparative Welfare Studies ( Aalborg University,
THE KEPLER SPACE UNIVERSITY and KEPLER SPACE INSTITUTE By: Provost Bob Krone, Ph.D. 1June 2011.
EUROPE: A PORTRAIT Diversity and common features.
Promoting the new man: masculinity and gender-equality in swedish politics and society. Niclas Järvklo (doctoral candidate) Department of Literature and.
The development of the Scandinavian police during the 19th and 20th centuries: Transference, adaptation and cooperation Björn Furuhagen Uppsala University,
Beyond the Internet: Radical Reformer vs. Smooth Transformer Meelis Kitsing International Policy Fellow Center for Policy Studies (affiliated with the.
Monstrous Hybrids? Housing Systems in the UK and Sweden.
Britain & France: Introduction. Some core features: Liberal democracies Former great powers –major European has-beens? –Former colonial powers EU member.
AP Euro Seminar Derek Rack Per.4 Mon. 11/14. Prompt Compare and contrast political liberalism with political conservatism in the first half of the nineteenth.
CLOSING THE GAPS IN EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY William F. Maloney Office of the Chief Economist Latin America and Caribbean Region World Bank FOCAL- Conférence.
1 Lecture 9: Introduction to Democratic Systems SOSC 152.
POSC 2200 – Conclusion Russell Alan Williams Department of Political Science.
Danish Agricultural Advisory Service National Centre The adviser as important mediator of research and innovation in organic farming. Differences in organic.
Values education in Nordic preschools: Basis of education for tomorrow Kick Off Conference, Oslo, June 2013 Anna-Maija Puroila Adjunct professor,
Embassy of Sweden, Chisinau The new results strategy for Sweden’s reform cooperation with Eastern Europe, the Western Balkans and Turkey Mr.
ORIENTALISM Edward Said.  Edward Said surveys the history and nature of Western attitudes towards the East, considering Orientalism as a powerful European.
Area Studies Controversy ID01302 Kih, Hee-Seong. Questions Who are Social Scientists? And who are Area Specialists?
The Power of the Comparative Historical Method By Johann Peter Murmann August 5, 2005.
Comparative Government and Politics Introduction and Method.
Government and Politics in Europe Sept. 25, 2014 Hung-jen Wang 王宏仁.
Existing Programs to support development of micro-enterprise for informal economy workers and other poverty reduction programs 16 March 2012 Banyan tree.
Education for Tomorrow NordForsk Kick-off Conference June 2013 in Oslo The future of VET - learning from the Nordic countries Nordforsk research.
"Innovation-based Growth – the Development and the Future Challenges of the Finnish Innovation Environment” Timo Kekkonen Director, Confederation of Finnish.
1 北京大学燕京学堂 Yenching Academy of Peking University.
Different forms of capitalism, different forms of society Comparative Sociology Week 15.
Human Rights Certificate Provides historical, legal and philosophical perspectives on human rights issues. Explore issues such as child welfare, labor.
Introduction to the course; the concept of radicalism and interconnected terms Miroslav Mareš Course EUP 408 Radicalism in Europe School of Social Studies.
4/16/07 Assessment of the Core – Humanities with Writing Charlyne L. Walker Director of Educational Research and Evaluation, Arts and Sciences.
Women’s Employment as a Social Determinant of Women’s Health & Economic Globalization Toba Bryant Dennis Raphael Ted Schrecker Ronald Labonte Globalization.
A "Jean Monnet" project in terms of Erasmus + programme
A brief recap of the different branches
Introduction: Which are the emerging powers?
Gipuzkoa Sarean Networking Gipuzkoa.
FIGHTING CORRUPTION AND POVERTY: ARE WE GETTING IT RIGHT?
Government and Economics
Manifesto for Labour Law
The rise, fall and revival of the Swedish welfare state: what are the policy lessons from Sweden? Andreas Bergh, 2011 Abbey Little ECO
Introduction to Social Power
Unit 8 The Early Middle Ages
Cultural specific of governance institution-building: the comparative analysis of European experience International Symposium on ‘Belt and Road’ for Think.
Left-wing parties in European politics Current trends in European politics April 12th, 2018 Heikki Paloheimo
Different forms of capitalism, different forms of society
A "Jean Monnet" project in terms of Erasmus + programme
Intro to Nationalism.
Learning Community II Survey
Presentation transcript:

The Swedish Model: What, why and whereto? Lars Niklasson, Associate Professor Political Science Linköping University, Sweden

 Collective bargaining since 1928  Welfare for work (”Arbetslinjen”) since the 1950s (?)  A welfare state since the 1970s (?)  A ”high tax equilibrium”: high taxes and high quality (?)  ”Good government” generates trust in government?  Reforms since the 1990s  A new ”supermodel” (The Economist, February 2013) What is the Swedish Model?

 The roots: from the Vikings to the present days   The effects: quality of life and competitive advantage?  (Better than the alternatives?)  The logic: self-supporting trust (”equilibrium”)  (Only in Sweden?)  Operations: central/local, fragmented/coordinated  Whereto? Europeanization, globalization Topics of the course

 After completion of the course, the student should…  …be able to show a fundamental knowledge of the origins and structure of the Swedish government and the Swedish social system  …have the capacity to deal with the many myths concerning Sweden and Swedish society The ambition of the course

 Introduction to StatebuildingLars Niklasson  Swedish history to 1600Sofia Gustafsson  Swedish history Henrik Ågren  Swedish history Björn Ivarsson Lilieblad  Good government from 1850Lars Niklasson  The early politics of the WSElin Wihlborg  Seminar on the literature  Seminar on individual papers 1: The roots of the Swedish Model

 Introduction to politicsLars Niklasson  Education and trainingLars Niklasson  Governance & privatizationBo Persson  Legitimacy & efficiencyLars Niklasson  Drivers of changeElin Wihlborg  Seminar on the literature  Seminar on individual papers 2: The Swedish Welfare System

 Active participation at the seminars  Questions on the literature will be provided  Submit and defend a short individual paper  1,000-1,500 words  A topic related to the course  A question and a short analysis  Only few extra sources (use the literature)  Collaboration is encouraged  High grades for clarity and creativity Course requirements

 A history compendium  Articles by Bo Rothstein et al  Quality of Government Institute, Gothenburg  Morel, Palier & Palme 2012: Towards a Social Investment Welfare State? Ideas, Policies and Challenges, Bristol: The Policy Press  Articles from Oxford Handbook on Swedish Politics (forthcoming)  Articles on higher education policy The literature

 States are different  Nordic, Anglo-Saxon, German, French, Asian etc.  Parliaments, governments, bureaucracies etc.  Comparison helps us understand and see causalitys  The historical process helps explain present variety  What was before states?  Why have they dominated from 1648?  How were patterns formed? 1. Introduction to Statebuilding

 Estates (the nobility) vs absolutist kings  Strong peasants or towns (Not West/East)  A military state vs separation  ”Corruption” until 1870s vs 1730s  The legal systems, university education  Gradual shift from conservatism to corporatism vs radical break and strong liberalism (by the farmers)  S: Protectionism, administrative corp., social corp. (statism)  D: Radical break , farmers and towns, little corporatism  More private providers in the Danish WS, less paternalism Sweden and Denmark: Different paths and outcomes

 What are ”western” and ”eastern” patterns?  How do Sweden and Denmark fit these patterns?  Sweden’s bureaucracy was more corrupt for a longer time than Denmark’s; How? Why?  What were the important steps in Sweden’s ”road to mass politics”? How did it differ from Denmark’s?  How did the popular movements differ?  Can we see differences in the welfare states? (1993)  (Why is Sweden more similar to Denmark now? A new path?) Knudsen & Rothstein 1993: State-building in Scandinavia