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2. Comments on Hans A. Holter and Ana M. Ferreira: Inequality and Fiscal Multipliers: Implications for Economic Policy in the Nordic Countries.
- Author
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Krogh, Tord
- Subjects
ECONOMIC policy ,FISCAL policy - Published
- 2024
3. A tale of two papers.
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Saura, Anssi
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HUMAN genetics , *GENETICS periodicals , *RACE , *HUMAN heredity , *NATIONAL socialism - Abstract
Two papers published in HEREDITAS between 1921 and 1939 show how the attitude towards race biology changed in the course of the interwar period in the Nordic countries. In the early 1920s race biology was seen to constitute a legitimate science. Ordinary human genetics prevailed, however, over race biology already in the very beginning on the pages of HEREDITAS. Population thinking was introduced into the study of human heredity around the year 1930. It effectively contradicted the concept of the race. Interestingly, HEREDITAS does not carry a single paper on eugenics and sterilization. In 1939 we see a final repudiation of the doctrines on race. Times had changed and the National Socialists had usurped the doctrines of race in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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4. Misuse of co-authorship in Medical PhD Theses in Scandinavia: A Questionnaire Survey.
- Author
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Helgesson, Gert, Holm, Søren, Bredahl, Lone, Hofmann, Bjørn, and Juth, Niklas
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MEDICAL research ethics ,FRAUD in science ,UNIVERSITY rankings ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Background: Several studies suggest that deviations from proper authorship practices are commonplace in medicine. The aim of this study was to explore experiences of and attitudes towards the handling of authorship in PhD theses at medical faculties in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Methods: Those who defended their PhD thesis at a medical faculty in Scandinavia during the second half of 2020 were offered, by e-mail, to participate in an online survey. Survey questions dealt with experiences of violations of the first three of the ICMJE authorship criteria and misuse of authorship order in the thesis articles, as well as respondents' attitudes to these matters. Both questions with fixed response alternatives and questions with free-text responses were used. Quantitative data were analysed statistically using the Table functions in SPSS 25 and Chi-2 tests. Free-text responses were analysed qualitatively using manifest content analysis. Results: 287 valid questionnaires were returned (response rate: 34.1%). Almost half (46.0%) of the respondents reported that the ICMJE authorship criteria were not fully respected in at least one of the papers in their thesis, while a vast majority (96.7%) found it important that authorship is handled according to the ICMJE authorship criteria. 24.4% reported inadequate handling of authorship order in at least one paper. The qualitative results provide a wide spectrum of examples of how the ICMJE authorship criteria are circumvented. Conclusion: Despite increasing educational efforts to reduce deviations from good research practice at Scandinavian universities, the handling of authorship in medical papers remains problematic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. National digital strategies and innovative eHealth policies concerning older adults' dignity: a document analysis in three Scandinavian countries.
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Raja, Moonika, Kymre, Ingjerd G., Bjerkan, Jorunn, Galvin, Kathleen T., and Uhrenfeldt, Lisbeth
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OLDER people ,GRAND strategy (Political science) ,DIGNITY ,DIGITAL technology ,SCANDINAVIANS - Abstract
Background: Scandinavian countries are internationally recognised for leading the way in older adult care and in digitally transforming healthcare. Dignity has become a central value in care for older adults in all three Scandinavian countries. Investigating documents about digitalisation in these countries can offer insights into how the dignity of older adults is impacted by digitally transforming healthcare. This study aims to provide knowledge about digital strategies and eHealth policies concerning older adults' dignity in three Scandinavian countries: Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Methods: National-level documents by the Norwegian Directorate of eHealth, the Norwegian Directorate of Health, the Swedish Ministry of Health and Social Affairs and the Danish Ministry of Health concerning older adults were used as data sources. In addition, a systematic search of databases, informed by the Joanna Briggs Institute framework for systematic reviews of text and opinion papers, was undertaken to find relevant papers. All extracts concerning national digital strategies or innovative eHealth policies were deductively coded. Thereafter, extracts concerning older adults were inductively coded using a thematic analytic approach. Results: A total of 26 sources satisfied the inclusion criteria, 14 governmental papers and 12 other papers. The three countries' national digital strategies focused on access to digital technologies and continuous learning for digital skills. The included papers describing national eHealth policies underlined the importance of placing the patient at the centre of healthcare and how digital systems can increase feelings of safety. Both types of documents concerned access to data, digital device security and the human dimension of care. Conclusion: The findings present evidence on Scandinavian countries' national digital strategies and innovative eHealth policies concerning older adults' dignity. The documents describe a lack of digital competence among older adults, resulting disengagement may put their well-being and human dignity at risk. Findings also underline the importance of security and at the same time the human dimension of care: Use of new digital systems must be meaningfully integrated into digital strategies and eHealth policies. All three Scandinavian countries strategies and policies underline the importance of equal access to healthcare services, as thus they promote a stance of dignified care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Mental health disorders research in Europe, 2001-2018.
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Begum, Mursheda, Lewison, Grant, Wölbert, Eva, Brigham, Karen Berg, Darlington, Meryl, Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle, and Sullivan, Richard
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BIBLIOMETRICS ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Background The burden of mental health disorders in Europe is well above the world average and has increased from 11.5% to 13.9% of the total disease burden in 2000 and 2015. That from dementia has increased rapidly, and overtaken that from depression as the leading component. There have been no analyses of the research activity in Europe to combat this burden. Methodology We identified research papers in the Web of Science (WoS) with a complex mental health disorders filter based on title words and journal names in the years 2001-18, and downloaded their details for analysis. Results European mental health disorders research represented less than 6% of the total biomedical research. We estimate that research expenditure in Europe on mental health disorders amounted to about €5.4 billion in 2018. The Scandinavian countries, with Croatia and Estonia, published the most relative to their wealth, but the outputs of France and Romania were less than half the amounts expected. Discussion and conclusions The burden from mental health disorders is increasing rapidly in Europe, but research was only half what would have been proportional. Suicide & self-harm, and alcohol misuse, were also neglected by researchers, particularly since the latter also causes many physical burdens, such as foetal alcohol syndrome, interpersonal violence, and road traffic accidents. Other relatively neglected subjects are sexual disorders, obsessive compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity and sleep disorders. There is an increasing volume of research on alternative (non-drug) therapies, particularly for post-traumatic stress and eating disorders, notably in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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7. What Do We Know about Age Management Practices in Public and Private Institutions in Scandinavia?—A Public Health Perspective.
- Author
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Macassa, Gloria, Chowdhury, Ehsanul Huda, Barrena-Martinez, Jesus, and Soares, Joaquim
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EMPLOYEE health promotion ,AGE discrimination ,PUBLIC administration ,PERSONNEL management ,PUBLIC institutions ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
In view of global population ageing and of policies that support longer working lives, especially in developed countries, it is important to achieve diversity in organisations through age management. Age management is the "management of human resources, [often] with an explicit focus on the requirements of an ageing workforce." Through age management practices, organisations will be better able to change their human resource management policies and practices towards accommodating their ageing workforce. Little is known about age management practices in Scandinavian organisations, considering the region's high prevalence of workers beyond the age of 50 across both private and public organisations. There are indications that Scandinavian business organisations are already practicing age management for all ages, including older workers. Their age management practices include the dimensions of job recruitment, training, lifelong learning, development, and promotion. However, there is a dearth of knowledge on how the health and well-being of workers is ensured in the context of age management practices in these organisations. Given the current and future importance of age management for all organisations globally, public health and other health science professionals need to collaborate with other disciplines, such as management and sustainability science, to better understand how they can contribute to an aged and healthier workforce as well as workplace health promotion. This paper aims to contribute to the discussion concerning age management in public and private institutions in Scandinavia through the public health lens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Comments on Hans A. Holter and Ana M. Ferreira: Inequality and Fiscal Multipliers: Implications for Economic Policy in the Nordic Countries.
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Junttila, Juha
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FISCAL policy - Published
- 2024
9. Research roundup.
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Welyczko, Nikki
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HEART failure risk factors ,SCANNING systems ,MEDICAL technology ,HEALTH ,NURSING ,INFORMATION resources ,NEPHROLOGY ,FIBROSIS ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,MEDICAL research ,URINALYSIS ,QUALITY of life ,KIDNEY diseases ,EARLY diagnosis ,ALBUMINS ,BIOMARKERS ,DIET therapy ,DIET ,WELL-being ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
In this section, Nikki Welyczko presents a brief synopsis of a range of recently published articles that may be of interest to nurses working in the renal setting. The aim of this roundup is to provide an overview, rather than a detailed summary and critique, of the research papers selected. Should you wish to look at any of the papers in more detail, a full reference is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Nordic Paper: New majority owner.
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STOCK ownership , *PAPER industry - Abstract
The article reports that Special Situations Venture Partners III (SSVP), a private equity fund advised by Orlando Management AG, has acquired 60 percent of the shares of Nordic Paper, making it the company's majority owner as of December 2014.
- Published
- 2014
11. Dimensions of Accessibility and Interoperability for Electronic Health Records in the Nordic Countries: A Qualitative Evidence Synthesis of Facilitators and Barriers.
- Author
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Grundstrom, Casandra, Väyrynen, Karin, and Isomursu, Minna
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ELECTRONIC health records ,INTERNETWORKING ,STAKEHOLDERS ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
This paper presents a qualitative evidence synthesis of facilitators and barriers of accessibility and interoperability of electronic health records in the Nordic Countries, i.e. Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Iceland. The findings are based on a thematic analysis of 19 papers selected through a systematic search strategy from databases covering research on medicine and information systems. We recognise three dimensions in accessibility facilitators, five dimensions in accessibility barriers, two dimensions in interoperability facilitators, and three in interoperability barriers. Our findings indicate that there is an imbalance in research addressing different stakeholders, and there are differences on how stakeholders affect or are affected by the accessibility and interoperability barriers and facilitators. The findings can help in designing policies and solutions for creating health record platforms which support all relevant stakeholders in healthcare delivery [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
12. Impartial Administration and Peaceful Agrarian Reform: The Foundations for Democracy in Scandinavia.
- Author
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ANDERSEN, DAVID
- Subjects
LAND reform ,DEMOCRACY ,DEMOCRATIZATION ,CIVIL society ,MERITOCRACY - Abstract
Why was the route to democracy in Scandinavia extraordinarily stable? This paper answers this question by studying Scandinavia's eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century peaceful agrarian reforms, which contributed to auspicious state–society relations that made democracy progress relatively smoothly. Based on comparisons with contemporary France and Prussia and process-tracing evidence, the paper shows that Scandinavia achieved relatively extensive and peaceful agrarian reforms because of relatively high levels of meritocratic recruitment to the central administration and state control over local administration, which ensured impartial policymaking and implementation. These findings challenge prevailing theories of democratization, demonstrating that the Scandinavian countries represent an alternative, amicable path to democracy led by civil servants who attempt to transform their country socioeconomically. Thus, strong state-cum-weak society countries likely have better odds of achieving stable democracy than weak state-cum-weak society countries. However, building bureaucratic state administrations alongside autonomous political societies is probably a safer road to democracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Joint Utility or Sub-optimal Outcomes? Household Income Development of Same-Sex and Different-Sex Couples Transitioning to Parenthood in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden.
- Author
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van der Vleuten, Maaike, Evertsson, Marie, and Moberg, Ylva
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HETEROSEXUALITY ,INCOME ,RESEARCH funding ,PARENTHOOD ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
Unequal divisions of paid work and care among new parents contribute to increasing inequalities. One explanation for this is joint utility maximization and the benefits of partners (temporarily) specializing in paid work and care. This paper examines the (dis)advantages of specializing compared to dividing tasks more equally by studying whether differences in specialization between same-sex and different-sex couples lead to differences in household earnings after entering parenthood. Using register data from Norway, Finland, Denmark, and Sweden and examining first-time parents, we show that female couples have a more equal within-couple income development during the transition to parenthood than different-sex couples do. However, we find no differences in household income (including or excluding social transfers) between the two types of couples. Although a more equal task division may be preferred from an individual perspective, our results show no evidence of a "best strategy" when it comes to maximizing household income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Young Spouses' Experiences of Having a Partner With Heart Disease and Adolescents Living at Home.
- Author
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Holmbom, Matilda, Andréasson, Frida, Grundström, Hanna, Bernild, Camilla, Fålun, Nina, Norekvål, Tone Merete, Kikkenborg Berg, Selina, and Strömberg, Anna
- Subjects
HEART diseases ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITATIVE research ,SPOUSES ,INTERVIEWING ,HOME environment ,PARENTING ,EXPERIENCE ,CAREGIVERS ,THEMATIC analysis ,LATENT structure analysis ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
Aim: To describe the life situation of spouses having a partner with heart disease and adolescents living at home. Design: Qualitative inductive design. Method: Participants (n = 22) were included from three Scandinavian countries. Semi‐structured interviews were analysed using thematic analysis with an inductive and latent approach. Results: Three themes were derived. 'Being in spousal and parental role transition' described how daily life had been affected and parental responsibilities had been doubled due to their partner's heart disease. 'Living with unpredictability and insecurity' included how the unpredictable illness trajectory caused worries and affected the well‐being of the family. 'Managing a challenging life situation' highlights how spouses coped with their partners' heart disease and adapted to a new life situation. Conclusion: Young spouses' life situation was greatly affected by their partner's heart disease, resulting in increased responsibilities and double parenthood. Having a positive attitude and mindset towards life was used as a strategy to cope with the changed life situation and find a new way of life. Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care: All family members are affected by heart disease. Spouses needed additional professional support and guidance on how to involve the children when a parent is ill. Impacts: This study highlights how young spouses, with adolescents living at home, experience their life situation.The life situation is unpredictable due to the partner's heart disease, as they must handle both caring for their partner and taking on double parenthood.Research involving family members can improve person‐ and family‐centred care and treatment outcomes in health care and society. Reporting Method: COREQ checklist was used preparing the manuscript. Patient or Public Contribution: Data collection included interviews with spouse. What Does This Paper Contribute to the Wider Global Clinical Community?: By highlighting the spouses changed life situation due to heart disease and the importance of including them in health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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15. Reality and Fiction: Scandinavian Tour Operators' Image of Italy through Photographs.
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Pesaresi, Andrea and Abbasian, Saeid
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TOUR brokers & operators ,MASS tourism ,SCANDINAVIANS ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,INFORMATION resources ,DESTINATION image (Tourism) ,IMAGE ,EXHIBITION catalogs - Abstract
The fact that traditional information sources are neglected by tour operators and the statement arguing that digital information sources, contrarily to traditional paper ones, allow the projection of modern and innovative destination images, served as a starting point for this study. The aim of this research is to determine what destination images of Italy are projected by traditional and digital information sources from 15 Scandinavian tour operators. A qualitative method based on secondary data (1306 photographs) and a thematic analysis has been employed. Images from catalogs mainly illustrate Italy with hidden mass tourism, famous Italy, and culture, while images from social media accounts mainly represent Italy with mass tourism, unfamiliar Italy, and culture. Further, each Scandinavian country focuses on specific features of Italy. This research has implications for Scandinavian tour operators, DMOs (Destination Management Organizations) in Italian cities and for Scandinavian tourists to Italy, suggesting how displaying images more consistent with reality would better match the customers' need for information through photographs and more accurately form and shape their pre-travel expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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16. Inequality and Fiscal Multipliers: Implications for Economic Policy in the Nordic Countries.
- Author
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Holter, Hans A. and Ferreira, Ana M.
- Subjects
FISCAL policy ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This paper discusses recent research on the distribution of income and wealth as determinants of fiscal multipliers and the implications for economic policy in the Nordic countries. Economies with higher wealth inequality or lower income inequality have been shown to have more low-wealth and credit-constrained consumers. These consumers have less of an elastic labour supply response to fiscal policies that change their future income but more of an elastic response to policies that change their current income. The labour supply elasticity across the wealth distribution drives the fiscal multiplier. Nordic countries are characterised by high wealth inequality and low income inequality, two features associated with a large number of credit-constrained and low-wealth households. Thus, we expect fiscal stimulus programmes that increase consumers' current income to have more of an impact in the Nordic Region and programmes that increase future income to have less of an impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
17. Moving beyond the external face of accountability: constructing accountability for sustainability from within.
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Frostenson, Magnus and Johnstone, Leanne
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PROCESS control systems ,SUSTAINABILITY ,COMMERCIAL trusts ,SOCIAL impact ,SUSTAINABLE construction - Abstract
Purpose: Motivated to know more about the internal means through which accountability for sustainability takes shape within organisations (in what ways and by whom), this paper aims to explore how accountability for sustainability is constructed within an organisation during a process of establishing a control system for sustainability. Design/methodology/approach: This paper adopts a qualitative case study approach of a decentralised industrial group, operating mainly in Scandinavia, between 2017 and 2020. Both primary and secondary data are used (e.g. document analyses, semi-structured interviews, informal conversations and site visits) to inform the findings and analysis. Findings: The findings reveal a multi-faceted path towards accountability for sustainability that involves several concerns and priorities at organisational and individual levels, resulting in a separate sustainability control systems within each subsidiary company. Although hierarchical structures for accountability exist, socialising accountability activities are needed to (further) mobilise sustainable accounts. Practical implications: Successful sustainable control systems require employees making sense of formalised accountability instruments (e.g. policies and procedures) to establish their roles and responsibilities in organisations. Social implications: This paper proposes socialisation processes as important for driving forward sustainability solutions. Originality/value: This study elaborates on the internal accountability dynamic for the construction of sustainable accounts. Its novelty is built upon the interaction of hierarchical and socialising accountability forms as necessary for establishing a control system for sustainability. It furthermore illustrates the relationship between the external and internal pathways of accountability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. A Pragmatic Approach to the Economic Assessment of Green Synthetic Methane Power in the Baltics.
- Author
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Sauhats, Antans, Petrichenko, Roman, and Zima-Bockarjova, Marija
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SYNTHETIC natural gas ,GAS power plants ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,POWER resources ,NATURAL gas ,METHANE as fuel ,METHANE ,RESERVOIRS - Abstract
The synthesis of methane from hydrogen and carbon dioxide creates an energy resource that is suitable for long-term storage. Once this process is powered by renewable electricity, it produces a clean fuel for producing electricity and heat and supports large-scale renewable energy deployment, energy transition and climate change mitigation. This paper proposes a pragmatic approach to assessing the economic potential of synthetic methane-based power. Today, natural gas plays an important role in the Baltic region due to the existing infrastructure, which includes a transmission and distribution pipeline network, gas power plants and a large underground storage reservoir. Replacing natural gas with synthetic methane would fulfil carbon emission reduction ambitions. In this paper, we simulate electricity producers' actions at market conditions and consider the generation portfolio in the Baltics and the interconnections with Scandinavia and Poland operating in the NORDPOOL electricity market. As a result of these calculations, we obtain the volume of the synthetic gas, the production costs, the volume of gas storage, the installed capacity of the gas power plant, and the investments required to ensure energy transition and system adequacy. These results are essential for the informed decisions made by policymakers, investors and system operators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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19. Precursors of Sociolinguistic Typology.
- Author
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Jahr, Ernst Håkon and Kilarski, Marcin
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INDIGENOUS languages of the Americas ,LINGUISTICS ,LANGUAGE & languages ,LINGUISTIC complexity ,AMERICAN English language ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,SOUND systems ,COMMUNITIES ,ETHNOHISTORY ,INVENTORIES - Abstract
This paper examines the contribution of the Norwegian historian, politician, and ethnologist Ludvig Kristensen Daa (1809–1877) to the study of the Indigenous languages of North America. We focus on his accounts of sound systems, where he argued that North American languages are characterized by greater linguistic diversity, small consonant inventories and gaps in inventories, unusual sounds, and indistinct pronunciation of consonants. Daa attributed these features to the use of the languages in small and isolated communities, thus anticipating more recent discussions in which the degree of linguistic complexity is attributed to social and demographic factors. While some of his claims reflect methodological shortcomings of pre-20th-century phonetic study, the factors which according to Daa shape languages spoken in isolation are analogous to the parameters now examined by typologists, thus providing a sense of continuity across centuries in the links sought between structural diversity among languages and external factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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20. Comment on J.K Pareliussen, M. Hermansen, C. André and O. Causa: Income Inequality in the Nordic Countries from an OECD Perspective.
- Author
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Elmeskov, Jørgen
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INCOME inequality - Published
- 2018
21. Guest editorial for NOFOMA 2017 conference special issue (SI).
- Author
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Hellström, Daniel, Kembro, Joakim Hans, Norrman, Andreas, and Pålsson, Henrik
- Subjects
BUSINESS logistics conferences ,SUPPLY chain management - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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22. Metallic deformation on para-Sasaki-like para-Norden manifold.
- Author
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Akpınar, Rabia Cakan and Kansu, Esen Kemer
- Subjects
DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) ,CURVATURE - Abstract
The main goal of this paper is to define the concept of metallic deformation through a relation between the metallic structure and paracontact structure on an almost paracontact para-Norden manifold. A Riemannian connection is obtained on a metallically deformed para-Sasaki-like para-Norden manifold. A φ-connection is obtained via the Riemannian connection on a metallically deformed para-Sasaki-like para-Norden manifold. The curvature tensors, Ricci tensors, scalar curvatures, and ∗-scalar curvatures are investigated with respect to the Riemannian connection and the φ-connection. Finally, an example is given of a metallically deformed 3-dimensional para-Sasaki-like para-Norden manifold. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Impact of dynamic working capital management on operational efficiency: empirical evidence from Scandinavia.
- Author
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Yeboah, Samuel and Kjærland, Frode
- Subjects
ASSET management accounts ,WORKING capital ,CORPORATE profits ,ACCOUNTS receivable ,CASH management ,CAPITAL movements ,ACCOUNTS payable - Abstract
Purpose: Consumer goods firms often tie up inventory and accounts receivable resources, creating cost and liquidity issues. Dynamic working capital management (DWCM) can mitigate these concerns and enhance operational profitability. The study investigates DWCM's impact on operational efficiency (OE). Design/methodology/approach: The empirical estimation uses pooled ordinary least squares (OLS), random effect and system generalized method moments (GMM) regression analysis of consumer goods firms in Scandinavia from 2005 to 2022 to present the results. Findings: The findings indicate that DWCM has an inverse relationship with operating cost, while positively impacting operating profit. The final outcome demonstrates that DWCM enhances OE. Furthermore, the working capital ratio (WCR) consistently exceeds the cash conversion cycle (CCC) in all models, indicating that prudent management of cash in accounts receivable, inventory and accounts payable leads to higher cost savings and superior performance. Practical implications: The results suggest that organizations that prioritize the management of the absolute cash committed to inventory, receivables and payables as much as the CCC experience improved OE. Originality/value: This paper adds to the literature on how DWCM affects OE in the consumer goods sector. It also highlights the impact of time management and cash management in WCM on OE. Additionally, it analyzes how DWCM variables affect operating costs and profits, shedding light on their efficiency impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Children with palliative care needs – the landscape of the nordic countries.
- Author
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Winger, Anette, Holmen, Heidi, Birgisdóttir, Dröfn, Lykke, Camilla, Lövgren, Malin, Neergaard, Mette Asbjoern, Grönroos, Marika, Kero, Johanna, Kristinsdóttir, Oddný, Pétursdóttir, Ásta Bjarney, and Castor, Charlotte
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PALLIATIVE treatment ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,PEDIATRICS ,NEEDS assessment ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Background: To strengthen palliative care for children in the Nordic countries, an updated status of current needs, resources, clinical services, education, and research is necessary to align and consolidate future research. A Nordic research collaboration initiative for children with palliative care needs was assembled in 2023. Building on this initiative, this paper presents an overview of pediatric palliative care (PPC) in the Nordic countries' (a) population characteristics, (b) care models and setting of care, (c) education and training, and (d) research. Methods: The Nordic initiative researchers collaboratively gathered and assessed available data on the characteristics of PPC within Denmark, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, the Faroe Islands, Sweden, and Åland. Data were compiled in a matrix with population characteristics, models- and setting of care, education and training, and areas of research in a Nordic context. The findings are narratively and descriptively presented, providing an overview of Nordic PPC. Results: In total, the Nordic child population comprises around six million children (0–19 years), of which about 41.200 are estimated to be living with a life-limiting and/or life-threatening condition. Healthcare services are provided through various care models, ranging from specialized care to homecare settings. Overall, there remain few opportunities for education and training with some exceptions. Also, Nordic research within PPC has been shown to be a growing field although much remains to be done. Conclusion: This overview is the first outline of the current PPC in Nordic countries. Although some differences remain important to acknowledge, overall, the strengths and challenges faced within PPC in the Nordic countries are comparable and call for joint action to increase evidence, services, and education to better serve the children, families, and healthcare personnel within PPC. Despite the varying structural premises for PPC, research endeavors aiming to provide evidence in this field seem increasing, timely and relevant for the Nordic countries, as well as the international context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Dealing with Mobility: Guilds and Tramping Journeymen in Seventeenth-Century Scandinavia.
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Candréus, Cecilia
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HIKING ,GUILDS ,PERSONNEL management ,EDUCATIONAL mobility - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to discuss the mobility of skilled labour within small and specialised guilds in peripheral Europe during the mid-seventeenth century. Based on archival records for passementerie makers and embroiderers in Stockholm, Sweden and Copenhagen, Denmark, the paper highlights conflicts brought on by labour mobility. What can these conflicts tell us about the situation within two small and specialised trades in Scandinavia, and how were they handled? The study examines examples of the actual implementation of both regulations and traditions associated with the crafts. This illuminates historical strategies for human resource management as well as economic relations between Scandinavia and the Continent. The results suggest a balancing act of negotiations between the needs of journeymen and masters respectively, paired with a pronounced need to align with their German counterparts. It also becomes clear that conditions differed between Stockholm and Copenhagen. Not only was the number of native artisans higher within the Danish guilds concerned, there was also substantial re-growth by apprenticeship. In contrast, Sweden was heavily dependent on immigration of skilled labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Norden Golden Manifolds with Constant Sectional Curvature and Their Submanifolds.
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Şahin, Fulya, Şahin, Bayram, and Erdoğan, Feyza Esra
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SUBMANIFOLDS ,CURVATURE ,TENSOR fields - Abstract
This paper discusses the Norden golden manifold having a constant sectional curvature. First, it is shown that if a Norden golden manifold has a constant real sectional curvature, the manifold is flat. For this reason, the notions of holomorphic-like sectional curvature and holomorphic-like bisectional curvature on the Norden golden manifold are investigated, but it is seen that these notions do not work on the Norden golden manifold. This shows the need for a new concept of sectional curvature. In this direction, a new notion of sectional curvature (Norden golden sectional curvature) is proposed, an example is given, and if this new sectional curvature is constant, the curvature tensor field of the Norden golden manifold is expressed in terms of the metric tensor field. Since the geometry of the submanifolds of manifolds with constant sectional curvature has nice properties, the last section of this paper examines the semi-invariant submanifolds of the Norden golden space form. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Nitrogen export from a boreal stream network following forest harvesting: seasonal nitrate removal and conservative export of organic forms.
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Schelker, J., Sponseller, R., Ring, E., Högbom, L., Löfgren, S., and Laudon, H.
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NITROGEN ,NONMETALS ,LOGGING ,WATERSHEDS - Abstract
Boreal streams are under pressure from large scale disturbance by forestry. Recent scenarios predict an increase in forest production in Scandinavia to meet market demands and to mitigate higher anthropogenic CO
2 emissions. Increased fertilization and shorter forest rotations are anticipated which will likely enhance the pressure on boreal streams in the near future. Among the major environmental impacts of forest harvesting is the increased mobilization of inorganic nitrogen (N), primarily as nitrate (NO3 -) into surface waters. But whereas NO3 - inputs to first-order streams have been previously described, their downstream fate and impact is not well understood. We evaluated the downstream fate of N inputs in a boreal landscape that has been altered by forest harvests over a 10 year period to estimate the effects of multiple clear-cuts on aquatic N export in a boreal stream network. Small streams showed substantial leaching of NO3 - in response to harvests with concentrations increasing by ~ 15 fold. NO3 - concentrations at two sampling stations further downstream in the network were strongly seasonal and increased significantly in response to harvesting at the medium size, but not at the larger stream. Nitrate removal efficiency, Er, calculated as the percentage of "forestry derived" NO3 - that was retained within the landscape using a mass balance model was highest during the snow melt season followed by the growing season, but declined continuously throughout the dormant season. In contrast, export of organic N from the landscape indicated little removal and was essentially conservative. Overall, net removal of NO3 - between 2008 and 2011 accounted for ~ 70% of the total NO3 - mass exported from harvested patches distributed across the landscape. These results highlight the capacity and limitation of N-limited terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems to buffer inorganic N mobilization that arises from multiple clear-cuts within meso-scale boreal watersheds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Children's Rights to and in Sport: A Comparative Analysis of Organizational Policies in the Scandinavian Countries.
- Author
-
Agergaard, Sine, Redelius, Karin, and Strandbu, Åse
- Subjects
SPORTS for children ,CHILDREN'S rights ,SPORTS participation ,POLICY analysis ,RECREATION ,PHYSICAL abuse ,CIVIL society - Abstract
It has long been stated that children have the rights to protection from, e.g., abuse and to the provision of age-appropriate leisure, play, and recreational activities along with participation in all matters that concerns them. Yet, the full range of children's rights to and in sport has not yet been explored in detail. To do so, it is relevant to turn to the Scandinavian countries, which are praised for promoting children's rights and well-being, with organized sport forming part of the daily lives of many children and youths. In this paper, we examine the organizational policies in Scandinavian sport in order to develop foundational knowledge about how the range of children's rights to and in sport may be supported. Comparing key policy documents of the major sports confederations in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, these analyses identify great variety in the following: 1. when and how children's rights to and in sport have been made explicit in the three countries; 2. whether the emphasis is on protection and/or provision of sport to children and youths or their participation in shaping sporting activities; 3. the degree to and ways in which such rights are regulated. In sum, our findings reflect a disparity between organizational policies in the three countries, with a more liberal and individualistic approach to public policy in the Danish context, providing some explanation of the only recent development in and scattered enaction of regulations to support children's rights to and in sports. Furthermore, we identify that political attention has mainly been drawn to the protection and provision of sports to children and youths, while their participation in shaping sport is a shared challenge for sport confederations in the Scandinavian countries and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A novel infrared imager for studies of hydroxyl and oxygen nightglow emissions in the mesopause above northern Scandinavia.
- Author
-
Dalin, Peter, Brändström, Urban, Kero, Johan, Voelger, Peter, Nishiyama, Takanori, Trondsen, Trond, Wyatt, Devin, Unick, Craig, Perminov, Vladimir, Pertsev, Nikolay, and Hedin, Jonas
- Subjects
OXYGEN ,AIRGLOW - Abstract
The paper describes technical characteristics and presents the first scientific results of a novel infrared imaging system (imager) for studies of nightglow emissions coming from the hydroxyl (OH) and molecular oxygen (O 2) layers in the mesopause region (80–100 km) above northern Scandinavia. The OH imager was put into operation in November 2022 at the Swedish Institute of Space Physics in Kiruna (67.86° N, 20.42° E; 400 m altitude). The OH imager records selected emission lines in the OH(3-1) band near 1500 nm to obtain intensity and temperature maps at around 87 km altitude. In addition, the OH imager registers infrared emissions coming from the O 2 IR A-band airglow at 1268.7 nm in order to obtain O 2 intensity maps at a slightly higher altitude, around 94 km. This technique allows the tracing of wave disturbances in both horizontal and vertical domains in the mesopause region. Validation and comparison of the OH(3-1) rotational temperature with collocated lidar and Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) satellite temperatures are performed. The first scientific results obtained from the OH imager for the first winter season (2022–2023) are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Lines of Power: The Eighteenth-Century Struggle Over the Norwegian–Swedish Border in Central Scandinavia.
- Author
-
Lien, Anne Christine and Lundberg, Anders
- Subjects
ELECTRIC lines ,BORDERLANDS ,CARTOGRAPHY ,STRUGGLE ,NEGOTIATION ,COUNTRIES ,HISTORICAL maps - Abstract
The final position of the Norwegian–Swedish border was determined in 1751, after challenging negotiations. This paper focuses on central parts of Scandinavia and investigates the role of cartography in the border positioning process. The examination of a wide variety of historical maps before and after the border treaty provides insight into the differing opinions on the border region's shifting affiliation. Other factors that helped to shape the borderline were a turbulent political situation with shifting sovereignty over the area in question, as well as conflicts over valuable resources. The findings indicate that cartographic evidence had an important role in the position of the Norwegian–Swedish border in central Scandinavia. The paper adds to our understanding of maps as a political tool as well as of the role of resources in border processes, and provides new knowledge on how cartography influenced a national border between two countries fighting for land, resources and hegemony. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Expectations and tensions in school leadership regarding the 2014 Danish school reform: emerging perspectives linking school leadership, learning and well-being.
- Author
-
Carlsson, Monica
- Subjects
WELL-being ,LEADERSHIP ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,LEARNING ,SCHOOLS ,SCHOOL administration ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the expectations of and possible tensions in school leadership regarding the implementation of the 2014 Danish school reform and, by extension, to address emerging perspectives linking school leadership, learning and well-being. Design/methodology/approach: An analysis of central policy documents in the reform as well as research reports examining the role of leadership in the implementation of the reform offers insights into the new expectations of and tensions in school leadership. Drawing on theories of school leadership, the analysis highlights the various forms and aspects of school leadership that are at play in the reform. Findings: The analysis identifies expectations regarding school leadership, ranging from aspects of strategic leadership that focus on management by objectives and results to aspects that are closer to teaching, such as curriculum and instructional leadership. It furthermore highlights barriers with regard to realizing policy intentions of strengthening instructional leadership, such as encroaching upon pedagogical and curriculum leadership, which have traditionally been the domain of teachers. Meanwhile, the kind of leadership that can be practiced through data-based management by objectives and results seems to have been perceived as a more viable approach in the implementation of the reform. Research limitations/implications: The papers' theoretical and empirical foundation is rooted in Danish and Scandinavian perspectives on schooling, and thus the generalizability of the findings may be limited to countries with similar perspectives or "packages of expectations" on linking school leadership, learning and well-being. Originality/value: The paper provides an original contribution through its engagement with the tensions inherent in the specific "package of expectations" and new demands on school leadership in the 2014 school reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Spaces of Resilience and Resistance: Sámi Habitation in Southern and Central Sweden During the Late Medieval and the Early Modern Period.
- Author
-
Nordin, Jonas Monié
- Subjects
SAMI (European people) ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,MIDDLE Ages ,NINETEENTH century ,FOOD habits - Abstract
This paper examines traces of Sámi habitation in southern and central Scandinavia, particularly Sweden, addressing the late medieval period to the end of the nineteenth century. It begins with Swedish judicial policy against Sámi nomadism in central Sweden, followed by a discussion of medieval Sámi material culture in southern Scandinavia. Further analysis addresses so-called Parish-Lapp indenture, which allowed nomadic Sámi to escape eviction to the far north (as decreed in 1671) by serving the parish. Yet, Sámi groups maintained and developed ritual practices, foodways, and language in a society parallel to the majority society and in resistance to it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Human Remains from Early Medieval Domburg (Netherlands) and Other Coastal Communities in International Perspective: Towards an International Research Agenda for the Cemeteries of the North Sea Emporia.
- Author
-
ten Harkel, Letty, van Dierendonck, Robert, Farber, Eleanor, Dee, Michael, Doeve, Petra, Hamerow, Helena, Jansma, Esther, Le Roux, Petrus, Panhuysen, Raphaël, and Deckers, Pieterjan
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains ,PHYSICAL anthropology ,ISOTOPIC analysis ,RADIOCARBON dating ,CEMETERIES - Abstract
Copyright of Medieval Archaeology is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A comparison of doctoral training in biomedicine and medicine for some UK and Scandinavian graduate programmes: learning from each other.
- Author
-
Williams, Anwen, Jones, Meriel G., Jonsson, Roland, Harris, Robert A., and Mulvany, Michael J.
- Subjects
DOCTOR of philosophy degree ,TRAINING ,GRADUATE education ,GRADUATES ,DOCTORAL students - Abstract
Although the historical bases for graduate training in the United Kingdom (UK) and Scandinavia both stem from the original concept developed by von Humboldt, and both award a 'PhD degree', their paths have diverged. There are thus significant differences in the manner in which graduate training is organised. To analyse these differences, two UK graduate programmes (School of Medicine, Cardiff University; Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool) and two Scandinavian graduate schools (Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Bergen; Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm) completed a Self‐evaluation questionnaire developed by Organisation of PhD Education in Biomedicine and Health Sciences in the European System (ORPHEUS)). Analysis of the completed questionnaires shows differences concerning requirements for admission, the training content of PhD programmes, the format of the PhD thesis, how the thesis is assessed and the financial model. All programmes recognise that PhD training should prepare for employment both inside and outside of academia, with emphasis on transferable skills training. However, the analysis reveals some fundamental differences in the direction of graduate programmes in the UK and Scandinavia. In the UK, graduate programmes are directed primarily towards teaching PhD students to do research, with considerable focus on practical techniques. In Scandinavia, the focus is on managing projects and publishing papers. To some extent, the differences lead to a lack of full recognition of each other's theses as a basis for doing a postdoc. This paper describes the basis for these differences and compares the two approaches and points to areas in which there is, or might be, convergence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION IN THE NORDIC AND BALTIC COUNTRIES. THROUGH SEMI-ONLINE TEACHER TRAINING AND RESEARCH.
- Author
-
Mullamaa, Kristina
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,TEACHER training ,LEARNING ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
The paper describes and analyses a semi-online format of international cooperation and further education of university teachers. Thanks to the Nordplus scholarship, seven universities in the Nordic and Baltic countries have been able to meet at seminars and discuss their work in the framework of Nordic-Baltic cooperation. Instead of traditional conference settings, the new semi-online format enables participants to create learning materials together and develop joint research. The format also allows participants to delve deeper into analyzing the specifics of their work, compare the modus operandi at their university with that of the others, experience and see work at different universities. Joint learning materials are created and published, the cooperation is analyzed at different levels and research is published together. We sum up the principles of cooperation and its format. The method is ethnographic research: descriptive analysis approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
36. An Empirical Investigation on Bubbles Contagion in Scandinavian Real Estate Markets.
- Author
-
Bago, Jean-Louis, Rherrad, Imad, Akakpo, Koffi, and Ouédraogo, Ernest
- Subjects
REAL estate business ,HOME prices ,SCANDINAVIANS - Abstract
This paper investigates the presence of speculative bubbles in the Scandinavian countries namely Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden over the period from 1980Q1 to 2018Q4 and searches for evidence of bubble migration among those countries. First, we apply the GSADF test developed by Phillips et al. (2015) on quarterly housing price-to-rent ratios to test for exuberance and episodic bubbles. Subsequently, we examine bubble migration between these markets using the nonparametric model with time-varying coefficients (NPM-TVC) developed by Greenaway-McGrevy and Phillips (2016). We find evidence of episodic bubbles in all the Scandinavian real estate markets for the period 1980 to 2018. Our results also indicate that housing bubbles are contagious between these markets during several periods, and the market connection is stronger for geographically neighboring countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Experiences of Epistemic Injustice among Minority Language Students Aged 6–16 in the Nordics: A Literature Review.
- Author
-
Wee, Hana L., Karkkulainen, Evelyn A., and Tateo, Luca
- Subjects
LITERATURE reviews ,LINGUISTIC minorities ,MINORITY students ,IMMIGRANT students ,TEACHER-student relationships ,INCLUSIVE education ,EPISTEMIC logic ,TEACHER role - Abstract
Background: Scandinavian education systems are recognized as being particularly inclusive. Nevertheless, an inclusive approach to education risks adopting a patronizing attitude that silences the voices of the very people who should be included. To discuss the role of epistemic justice in inclusion, we investigated current knowledge about the epistemic injustice experienced by students from immigrant backgrounds in Scandinavia; teacher perceptions of those students; and whether such perceptions influence student–teacher interactions. Do these perceptions lead to disparities? Method: A literature review was conducted focused on studies about the Nordic countries; teacher perceptions of students from immigrant backgrounds aged 6–16; and student–teacher interaction. The corpus included papers in English and the Nordic languages. Eight papers were included and rated by two independent authors. Results: The findings show that teacher perceptions of students from immigrant backgrounds influence student–teacher interaction in both verbal and non-verbal ways. The negative perceptions that teachers held of students from immigrant backgrounds led to experiences of epistemic injustice and epistemic exclusion. The literature provided no information on disparities in special needs education or assessment. Conclusions: Due to the limited literature on this topic, further research needs to be undertaken in order to fully understand experiences of epistemic injustice in schools. Further research into why students from immigrant backgrounds feel excluded and why they are lagging behind is also required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Effect of teleconnection patterns on cloudiness in winter in Poland.
- Author
-
MiĞ, Filip
- Subjects
CLOUDINESS ,NORTH Atlantic oscillation ,WINTER ,TELECONNECTIONS (Climatology) ,WATER management - Abstract
The subject of the study was the effect of teleconnection patterns on cloudiness in Poland in the period 1990–2020. The analysis was conducted based on daily cloudiness values from 34 measurement stations of Institute of Meteorology and Water Management - National Research Institute and monthly North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and Scandinavia (SCAND) indices from the collection of Climate Prediction Center (CPC). The course of cloudiness values in winter in the multiannual period was analyzed together with its averaged spatial distrubution for the entire winter and for particular winter months. Next, the coefficient of correlation of cloudiness with a given teleconnection pattern index was calculated. The analysis also covered cloudiness in the positive and negative teleconnection phases. The results confirm a variable course and increasing trend of winter cloudiness in Poland. The average cloudiness reached 76% in the studied multiannual period. The correlation coefficient for the North Atlantic Oscillation primarily adopted negative values, and positive for the Scandinavian circulation. The strongest correlation between the teleconnection pattern and cloudiness was observed in February for NAO and in December for SCAND. Cloudiness showed no considerable differences between the positive and negative teleconnection phases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Testate Amoebae (Amphitremida, Arcellinida, Euglyphida) in Sphagnum Bogs: The Dataset from Eastern Fennoscandia.
- Author
-
Ivanovskii, Aleksandr, Babeshko, Kirill, Chernyshov, Viktor, Esaulov, Anton, Komarov, Aleksandr, Malysheva, Elena, Mazei, Natalia, Meskhadze, Diana, Saldaev, Damir, Tsyganov, Andrey N., and Mazei, Yuri
- Subjects
PEAT mosses ,AMOEBA ,BOGS ,SPECIES diversity ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SPECIES pools - Abstract
The paper describes a dataset, comprising 236 surface moss samples and 143 testate amoeba taxa. The samples were collected in 11 Sphagnum-dominated bogs during frost-free seasons of 2004, 2007, 2009, 2017, and 2022. For the whole dataset, the sampling effort was sufficient in terms of observed species richness (143 species in total), though a regional species pool is deemed to be discovered incompletely (143 species is its lower 95 % confidence limit using Chao's estimator). The local community composition demonstrated high heterogeneity in a reduced ordination space. It supports the opinion that the high versatility of bog ecosystems should be taken into account during ecological studies. Dataset: https://doi.org/10.15468/mnapsy. Dataset License: CC-BY 4.0 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Why Phenomenology Came Into Nursing: The Legitimacy and Usefulness of Phenomenology in Theory Building in the Discipline of Nursing.
- Author
-
Norlyk, Annelise, Martinsen, Bente, Dreyer, Pia, and Haahr, Anita
- Subjects
NURSING research ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,NURSES ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PATIENT care ,NURSING care facilities - Abstract
Phenomenology was introduced to the field of nursing in late '70s in the US and Scandinavia. Since then, phenomenology has developed as a commonly used approach within nursing research. However, during the past two to three decades, phenomenological nursing research has come under attack from scholars outside the field of nursing who question the credibility and usefulness of phenomenological nursing research. The aim of this discussion paper is twofold: 1) to illuminate why phenomenology was introduced by nurse scholars to develop theory and as a framework for empirical research in the US and Scandinavia; and 2) to discuss the legitimacy of applying a phenomenological approach in nursing research and practice today. The rationale behind advocating the integration of a phenomenological approach into nursing practice was to defend, apprehend and articulate the essence of caregiving in theory building within nursing. We claim these arguments are maybe even more important today. Using three examples of empirical phenomenological studies, we illustrate how these studies provide theoretically informed insights into existential aspects of care that guide caring practice and accordingly humanise practice. We argue that phenomenology provides the nursing profession with a humanly sensitive approach that challenges the current tendency within healthcare to emphasise an evidence-based, standardised approach to patient care that inclines to neglect each patient's uniqueness. Nursing profession may lose its very raison d'être, i.e. to deliver humanly sensitive care, if nursing research ceases to address existential aspects of being a human. Thus, it is evident that phenomenological nursing studies have legitimacy and are important for developing theoretically informed insights that promote the discipline of nursing. Consequently, the value of phenomenological nursing research should be assessed based on the findings it provides that promote such knowledge. Hence, credibility and usefulness of phenomenological nursing research must be determined by the discipline itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Machine learning and the identification of Smart Specialisation thematic networks in Arctic Scandinavia.
- Author
-
Mikko, Moilanen, Stein, Østbye, and Jaakko, Simonen
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,RESEARCH institutes ,DECISION support systems - Abstract
The European Union (EU) has recognized that universities and research institutes play a critical role in regional Smart Specialisation processes. Our research aims to identify thematic cross-border research domains across space and disciplines in Arctic Scandinavia. We identify potential domains using an unsupervised machine-learning technique (topic modelling). We uncover latent topics based on similarities in the vocabulary of research papers. The proposed methodology can be utilized to identify common research domains across regions and disciplines in almost real time, thereby acting as a decision support system to facilitate cooperation among knowledge producers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Heritage with cows. Conserving Nordic human and nonhuman animals.
- Author
-
Kroløkke, Charlotte
- Subjects
HUMAN-animal relationships ,COWS ,WILDLIFE conservation ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
This paper takes a critical heritage approach to understanding the ways that the conservation of Nordic Mountain cows gets animated as a form of Nordic heritage. Today, Nordic Mountain cows are found in the Northern regions of Norway, Finland, and Sweden. Based on an archive of mediated material (websites, YouTube videos, and social media activism), policy documents as well as interviews with Nordic farm animal genetic resources directors, the paper analyzes how conservation becomes imagined. Viewing the conservation of Nordic Mountain cows as entangled with imaginaries of traditional ways of life, a Northern Nordic (endangered) landscape, and the potential for high quality, ethically sound Nordic heritage products; conservation gets imagined as a rescue technology preserving 'native' and 'endangered' breeds in the making of sustainable consumer goods and Nordic cultural heritage. The conservation of Nordic Mountain cows goes beyond the potentially endangered species, however, to the reiteration of Nordic exceptionalism and the promise of a pure (and white) Nordic biocultural refuge of human-nonhuman animal relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. An Experiment in Denmark to Infect Wounded Sitka Spruce with the Rotstop Isolate of Phlebiopsis gigantea , and Its Implications for the Control of Heterobasidion annosum in Britain.
- Author
-
Pratt, Jim and Thomsen, Iben M.
- Subjects
SITKA spruce ,WOOD-decaying fungi ,BIOLOGICAL pest control agents ,NORWAY spruce ,SAPWOOD ,RISK assessment ,SCOTS pine - Abstract
The formulation of a Finnish isolate of the saprotrophic wood-rotting fungus Phlebiopsis gigantea into the biocontrol agent (BCA) Rotstop, which is used to prevent infection of Norway spruce stumps by aerial basidiospores of H. annosum, has led to its application to more than 200,000 ha of forest in Scandinavia and North Europe. The success of this treatment opens the possibility of introducing the Rotstop strain into Britain for use on Sitka spruce stumps, which at present (2022) are lacking adequate prophylactic treatment. However, Rotstop is probably non-native to Britain and to North America (the ancestral home of this spruce), and we do not know if this xylem-decaying BCA can invade standing trees. In this paper, we describe a trial into this issue conducted for the U.K. Forestry Commission in Denmark, in a country where both Rotstop and Sitka spruce have been naturalised. It was preliminary to further stump treatment trials, and is relevant to long-term issues surrounding stump treatment in Britain. Inoculations into 44-year-old standing Sitka spruce with 20 mm wooden Scots pine plugs pre-colonised with Rotstop resulted in decay of the S1, S2, S3 and middle lamellae of sapwood above and below the wounds after 11–18 months. In contrast, infection of sapwood occurred in only one of 39 wounds on the same trees challenged with oidial spore inoculants adpressed to undamaged xylem sapwood during the same period. While the results suggest that release of Rotstop into the productive stands of Sitka spruce in Britain would be unlikely to cause long-term commercial losses to wounded trees, the work highlights issues relating to the assessment of risk associated with the introduction of non-native BCAs within the forest environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Government social spending in the EU countries: efficiency in poverty and income inequality reduction.
- Author
-
Magdalena Cyrek, Magdalena
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,PUBLIC spending ,POVERTY reduction ,POVERTY ,ADMINISTRATIVE efficiency - Abstract
Research background: Income inequality and poverty attract a lot of attention among politicians, activists as well as scientists, who are trying to find a solution to these socio-economic problems. State intervention is commonly expected in this field, however, there is no agreement about the most efficient methods and instruments, as well as about the scale of public expenditure for the purpose of limiting poverty and inequality. Purpose of the article: The aim of the paper is to specify efficiency of government social spending in reducing problems of poverty and income inequality in the EU countries. Moreover, the attention is paid to changes in the efficiency in a period of the 2007 crisis occurrence and its overcoming and to sources of the changes. Methods: To fulfill the main goal of the paper, the DEA method is used, which enables to compare the social efficiency of the EU countries. The Malmquist index is also calculated and decomposed to identify changes in the efficiency and their sources in the crisis period. Data used in the analyses were obtained from Eurostat and OECD databases and cover the period from 2007 to 2016 year. Findings & Value added: The main findings of the paper shed some light on the differences in social efficiency of government spending in the EU countries. Generally, the countries with a higher level of social spending are also those with lower efficiency in inequality reduction, however, the relationship doesn't appear for poverty alleviation. Thus, the research suggests some substitution between the scale and the efficiency of social spending, at least for the inequality dimension. Moreover, some differences in a social model can be found between the countries of the South and of the North: the countries of the South focus their social policy mainly on inequality reduction, while the Scandinavian countries as well as some other affluent societies direct their public support mainly on poverty alleviation. The research also shows that in the crisis period decreases in efficiency concerned mainly the poverty dimension. It reflects the fact that the poor were the losers of the crisis in favor of the middle classes. The efficiency losses were induced by negative changes in the current usage of public sources, while institutional reforms positively influenced the efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Spotify to Test More Expensive Subscriptions in Scandinavia.
- Author
-
Shaw, Lucas
- Subjects
TOILET paper - Abstract
(Bloomberg) -- Spotify Technology SA plans to sell a more-expensive version of its music service in Scandinavia, a test to see whether it can raise prices around the world, according to people familiar with the matter. The test doesn't mean Spotify will raise prices elsewhere or do so permanently in Scandinavia, they said. Raising prices could boost revenue in markets where Spotify already has a strong presence. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
46. The practice and pragmatics of Scandinavian research in rhetoric. Audience studies in Scandinavian rhetorical scholarship.
- Author
-
KJELDSEN, JENS E.
- Subjects
PRAGMATICS ,POWER (Social sciences) ,RHETORIC ,CROSS-cultural studies ,SCANDINAVIANS ,TRUST - Abstract
Copyright of Res Rhetorica is the property of Polish Rhetoric Society and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Role of Regional Atmospheric Circulation in Interannual Variability of the Ocean Heat Advection in the Nordic Seas.
- Author
-
Iakovleva, D. A. and Bashmachnikov, I. L.
- Subjects
ADVECTION ,HEAT flux ,SEA level ,OCEAN currents ,SPATIAL resolution ,OCEAN - Abstract
More than 90% of oceanic heat enters the Arctic Ocean with the Norwegian Current. In this paper we examine the mechanisms of the variability of the oceanic heat flux in the Norwegian Current (across the Svinoy section in the southern Norwegian Sea) in 1993–2019. GLORYS oceanic reanalysis with a spatial resolution of 1/12° is used. It is found that the variability of oceanic heat flux is associated with that of the water transport, which, in turn, is governed by the variability of the sea level gradient across the Norwegian Current. It is shown that an increase in water transport of the Norwegian Current is a result of a decrease of the atmospheric pressure over the central part of the Norwegian Sea. The latter intensifies the southwesterly winds along the Scandinavian Peninsula. The sea level gradients across the Norwegian Current, formed by the winds, are primarily associated with the Ekman pumping towards the coast, as well as with the wind stress curl. Both have a significant impact on the variability of water transport across the section. Another factor is the variability of the steric sea level gradient, which significantly affects the water transport during the period of a rapid temperature rise of in the Norwegian Current (1995–2005). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. 'Bigwig hatred' and the emergence of the first Scandinavian agrarian‐populist party.
- Author
-
Arter, David
- Subjects
ELITE (Social sciences) ,POPULIST parties (Politics) ,SCANDINAVIANS ,HATE ,AVERSION ,OTHER (Philosophy) - Abstract
In the genealogy of the Scandinavian populist‐party family, agrarian populism has been largely neglected and, when discussed at all, it is traced back to Finland in the late 1950s. This paper argues: (i) that agrarian populism long predated the 1950s and that it was politically salient from the decade before Finnish independence in 1917; (ii) that it is useful to distinguish between an agrarian‐class and agrarian‐populist party type; (iii) that in wider comparative perspective, first‐wave Finnish agrarian populism was distinctive; and iv) that during the critical party‐building phase, the Finnish Agrarian Party (AP) is best characterised a populist party embodying a diffuse small‐farmer antipathy towards socially superior urban elites. The AP did not create this 'bigwig hatred' (herraviha), but in perpetuating it and 'othering it' within a binary 'us‐and‐them' paradigm, it became the first populist party in both Finland and Scandinavia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Water Flows and Water Accumulations on Bedrock as a Structuring Element of Rock Art.
- Author
-
Horn, Christian, Potter, Rich, and Peternell, Mark
- Subjects
ROCK art (Archaeology) ,BEDROCK ,HYDROLOGY - Abstract
The paper proposes a new method to quantify the flow of water and water accumulation zones on bedrock panels. This can be used to investigate how water influences the placement of rock art. The analysis is based on photogrammetric models on which water flows and accumulations were modelled using a NetLogo simulation and the SAGA hydrology package. To test the hypothesis that water was a structuring element in the creation of rock art, case studies of Bohus-granite panels from south-western Sweden were used. The described approach should be possible to use on most rock art placed on bedrock panels regardless of rock type, its state of cleaning, or present microfauna. The modelling of water flows and accumulations is a powerful tool to compare the image placement and image density in relation to water even on widely separated panels on which such observations cannot be made directly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Agency and economic change in regions: identifying routes to new path development using qualitative comparative analysis.
- Author
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Grillitsch, Markus, Sotarauta, Markku, Asheim, Björn, Fitjar, Rune Dahl, Haus-Reve, Silje, Kolehmainen, Jari, Kurikka, Heli, Lundquist, Karl-Johan, Martynovich, Mikhail, Monteilhet, Skirmante, Nielsen, Hjalti, Nilsson, Magnus, Rekers, Josephine, Sopanen, Sami, and Stihl, Linda
- Subjects
ECONOMIC change ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMUNITY development ,DIVERSIFICATION in industry ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,QUALITATIVE research ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This paper investigates the role of human agency in 40 phases of regional economic development in 12 Nordic regions over 30 years. It contributes with a theoretical framework to study agency over time and a fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis based on a unique dataset combining over 200 interviews, with printed and online sources, and quantitative data. The paper identifies which combinations of agency types and context conditions make industrial upgrading or diversification possible, and investigates how such combinations come into being. The causal claims from this analysis are illustrated with empirical examples and discussed in relation to previous literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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