881 results
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2. Response to the paper by Betty Joseph: 'Thinking about a playroom'.
- Author
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Radeva, Diana
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOTHERAPISTS , *INTERIOR decoration , *GAMES , *PLAY , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *PATIENT-professional relations , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *CHILDREN - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Response to the paper by Betty Joseph: 'Thinking about a playroom'.
- Author
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Očková, Lenka, Galbavý, Martin, Flaška, Karel, and Pöthe, Peter
- Subjects
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INTERIOR decoration , *GAMES , *PLAY , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PSYCHOTHERAPY - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Rescaling public transport planning in Sweden: investigating the continued planning at the scale 'left behind'.
- Author
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Andersson, Ida and Hermelin, Brita
- Subjects
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PUBLIC transit , *GOOD & evil - Abstract
This paper aims to contribute to a qualitative understanding of rescaling and its impact on planning strategies and governance relations across scales. By investigating the effects of rescaling for the old scale 'left behind' – through the case of public transport planning in Sweden – this paper illustrates how rescaled tasks continue to engage the scale 'left behind' (and is a source of 'tensions'), long after a rescaling process has taken place. Through the lens of rescaling, three main points of discussion are highlighted in the paper: Firstly, processes of rescaling are intertwined with policy layering, and can as such be a source of both 'good and evil' for the continued planning on the scale 'left behind'. Secondly, this calls for an increased geographical sensitivity in research when investigating the effects of rescaling, as the formal and practical outcomes of rescaling can be spatially unequal for planning bodies with similar formal mandates on the same scale. Thirdly, the development of governance relations and 'tensions' between new and old scales, are by no means static in time nor space, and calls for increased dialogue across planning scales to aid in the transition of responsibilities from the old to the new scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Renovations as an investment strategy: circumscribing the right to housing in Sweden.
- Author
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Gustafsson, Jennie
- Subjects
- *
HOUSING research , *HUMAN settlements , *DWELLINGS , *HOUSING policy - Abstract
There is an emergent field of writings on financialized landlords' undertaking of apartment renovations as an investment strategy and its effect on housing inequalities. Seldom do these studies contextualize these tendencies within countries' specific housing policy traditions. Therefore, through a qualitative case study in a neighbourhood in Sweden, this paper aims to uncover how private landlords undertake renovations as an investment strategy and its effect on tenants and, in turn, on the hybrid character of a universal housing system. It finds that renovations enable landlords to extract value from the built environment while tenants experience rising rents, a lack of information, poor property maintenance, and apprehension. Hence, I argue that renovations represent an investment strategy that serves to undermine the traditional social right to housing within a universal housing policy context. The paper thus furthers knowledge on how the situatedness of financialization tendencies entails their translation through and transformation of housing systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A family perspective on daily (im)mobilities and gender-disability intersectionality in Sweden.
- Author
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Landby, Emma
- Subjects
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INTERSECTIONALITY , *MOTHER-child relationship , *CHILDREN with disabilities , *YOUNG women , *FAMILIES , *MOTHERS - Abstract
Women usually have more complex mobilities than men do, not least if having young children in need of mobility provision. Moreover, travelling can be more challenging if having a disability, and parents of disabled children usually face many constraints in relation to everyday mobility, which implies that mothers of disabled children might experience gender-disability intersectionality in relation to mobility. This paper is based on interviews with mothers with wheelchair-using children living in Sweden and explores intersectionality from a family perspective – gender of the mother and disability of a child. The paper is based on time geography, especially focusing on the competition between time-geographical projects in everyday life. The findings suggest that gender-disability intersectionality affect the mothers' geographical freedom and can imply both increased mobility and immobility in their lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Socio-technical regimes and heterogeneous capabilities: the Swedish pulp and paper industry's response to energy policies.
- Author
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Ottosson, Mikael and Magnusson, Thomas
- Subjects
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PAPER industry , *ENERGY policy , *ENERGY security , *ELECTRIC rates , *ENERGY consumption , *ENERGY conservation - Abstract
Based on a study of policy-induced changes in the Swedish pulp and paper industry, this paper follows a process of socio-technical regime destabilisation. Results from the study show that in industries where established firms have significant power, processes of endogenous renewal are more likely to destabilise established regimes than processes based on niche solutions. Further, the study shows how policy measures aimed to destabilise the current regime may result in different responses, owing to the different capabilities of individual firms. The analysis suggests that heterogeneous capabilities within established industries provide possibilities for policy makers to initiate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A Decade of Research on the Environmental Impacts of Pulp and Paper Mill Effluents in Canada: Field Studies and Mechanistic Research.
- Author
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McMaster, Mark, Mark Hewitt, L., and Parrott, Joanne
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PAPER industry , *PAPER mills , *PULP mills , *BLEACHING (Chemistry) , *DIOXINS , *BIOCHEMICAL oxygen demand , *FURANS - Abstract
Studies conducted in Sweden in the early 1980s provided some of the first evidence that effluents from some pulp mills were capable of inducing toxic responses in fish at very low concentrations in the receiving environment. In response to these findings, studies were initated in Canada and impacts of primary treated bleached kraft mill effluent on reproductive function in fish were found. Reproductive impacts in fish were not limited to mills that used chlorine in the bleaching process and were also evident at some mills that employed secondary effluent treatment. In 1992, new federal regulations were passed under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act to control releases of dioxins and furans, and a new Pulp and Paper Effluent Regulation under the Fisheries Act set stricter limits for biological oxygen demand and total suspended solids. Very importantly, the new regulations included requirements for environmental effects monitoring (EEM) at all mill sites. This allowed the effectiveness of the control limits in protecting fish, fish habitat, and human use of fisheries resources to be assessed. At the same time, the Minister of the Environment launched an intensive government, industry, and university research program. Results from this research program along with feedback from the EEM program would then be used to define what additional control actions might be necessary. This article reviews the field studies and mechanistic research conducted in Canada following the implementation of the new federal regulations. Great progress has been made in this area, first demonstrating reproductive effects at various locations, then determining the mechanisms responsible for the reproductive effects at specific sites, followed by the demonstration of partial recovery in reproductive function following process and treatment changes in response to the new regulations. However, it is clear from the results of the first two cycles of the EEM program that mill effluents still affect the local receiving environments at a number of locations across Canada, and that continued research combining field studies, bioassay application, and chemical identification is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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9. Which urban and landscape qualities make Arctic villages attractive? The Torne River villages in Sweden.
- Author
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Tornieri, Stefano, Ma, Jing, and Rizzo, Agatino
- Subjects
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FISHING villages , *TUNDRAS , *VILLAGES , *GREEN infrastructure , *PUBLIC spaces , *FISH communities , *SOCIAL values - Abstract
Throughout history, small village communities in the Arctic have developed several strategies to ensure their survival. Along the Torne River, some fishing communities have produced specific architectures, landscapes, and social strategies to support their communities and survive for centuries. However, depopulation, aging, climate change, and the expansion of the extraction industry are threatening these villages. The hypothesis is that traditional fishing villages situated alongside rivers possess architectural, urban, and social attributes that can enhance outdoor activities linked to water and green spaces and enable the long-term social sustainability of Arctic villages. The innovative approach of the paper involves combining a mapping methodology of green and blue infrastructure with the architectural, urban, social and historical values of a place to identify design strategies for improving attractiveness demonstrating its efficacy, particularly in small, local-scale villages. The paper investigates the villages of Kukkola and Korpikylä taken as emblematic examples and explores the architectural and landscape value in relation to the green–blue infrastructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Optimization of raw material procurement at pulp or paper mills – the influence of weather-related risks.
- Author
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Hultqvist, Daniel and Olsson, Leif
- Subjects
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INDUSTRIAL procurement , *PAPER mills , *PULP mills , *QUADRATIC programming , *MATHEMATICAL optimization , *STOCHASTIC processes - Abstract
There are usually many sources for the supply of raw material to a pulp or paper mill in Sweden. Optimization of this supply is therefore a challenging task, and can only be managed properly if all aspects of risk are considered. In our study, these risks are related to when the weather reduces the load-bearing capacity of the ground or the roads. A stochastic and a deterministic model have been formulated, and they have been solved with mixed-integer quadratic programming and tested with data from a Swedish forest company. The results of this study show that the option value is greater than zero and that both the optimal policy and the option value change whenever the storage cost is altered. This shows that the optimal planning policy obtained from the stochastic model differs from the solution of the deterministic model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Reuse or Burn? Evaluating the Producer Responsibility of Waste Paper.
- Author
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Marklund, Per-Olov and Samakovlis, Eva
- Subjects
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WASTE paper , *INCINERATION - Abstract
In 1992, Sweden introduced a producer responsibility ordinance which explicitly states that sorted out, collected waste paper must be material recycled. Another alternative could be to recover energy by incineration. Material recycling was prioritized, although there is no environmental consensus favouring either of the alternatives. By calculating shadow prices of waste paper for the paper industry and for the heating plants, this study tries to determine whether waste paper should be partly incinerated. The study also addresses whether the producer responsibility has contributed to an inefficient allocation of waste paper. The results find no economic support for the producer responsibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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12. Local culture and change agency in old industrial places: spinning forward and digging deeper.
- Author
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Stihl, Linda
- Subjects
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LOCAL culture , *CORPORATE culture , *SOCIAL evolution , *CULTURAL identity , *AGENT (Philosophy) - Abstract
The paper unpacks the relationship between local culture and agency to enhance our understanding of local variations of agency. The paper studies two former old industrial places in Sweden; one place characterized by an entrepreneurial culture (Borås), the other with a company town culture (Kiruna). Both cases experienced structural crisis around 1970s. A study period of more than 30 years is used to analyse actions and actors present in different phases of development, using 38 semi-structured interviews. The concepts of change agency and reproductive agency are used to analyse agentic patterns. Cultural transformation is mapped using values, heroes, symbols and rituals. The paper finds that the entrepreneurial culture is an enabling condition for change agency, whereas the company town culture is hampering change agency. The paper also finds that lock-ins can continue to affect actors after a crisis and that opportunities for change agency therefore is actor-specific, i.e. that local agency varies between actors and over time. Reproductive agency is present in both regions to maintain the cultural identity, but the company town culture is more resistant to institutional changes. Yet, both local cultures have changed, and in both cases the changes have opened for more change agency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. The art of being governed: the implementation of Covid-19 policies in Swedish on-license alcohol service.
- Author
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Bååth, Jonas and Nilsson, Johan
- Subjects
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COVID-19 , *COVID-19 pandemic , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *NUTRITION policy , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The licensed serving of alcoholic beverages is an important institutional aspect of food culture. In Sweden, the Government's policies to battle the Covid-19 pandemic meant further restrictions, including a temporary law, to mitigate contagion at licensed restaurants, bars, producers' tasting events, etc. This paper inquiries into the "art" exercised by managers of such businesses, already used to strict governance, of "being governed" when faced with these new and sudden policies. The study draws on Swedish Covid-19 policy and interviews with managers of licensed premises and a municipal auditor during the three months of the most far-reaching restrictions. By analyzing these materials through anthropological theories of state governance, the paper shows how Covid-19 restrictions were enacted in practice, including their discontents. The study's findings contribute to further insights into the role of alcohol policy in food culture and opens up for further bridging of food studies, service studies, and alcohol research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Negotiated Agreements and Sámi Reindeer Herding in Sweden: Evaluating Outcomes.
- Author
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Kløcker Larsen, Rasmus, Staffansson, Jannie, Omma, Inger-Ann, and O'Faircheallaigh, Ciaran
- Subjects
- *
SAMI (European people) , *HERDING , *CONTRACTS , *LAND resource , *NATURAL resources , *REINDEER - Abstract
In the European north, there is a growing trend for Sámi reindeer herding communities to enter negotiated agreements with developers on projects that aim to exploit land and natural resources. This paper offers, for the first time, an evaluation of the content of a selection of these agreements, drawing on a sample of 15 agreements from five communities in Sweden. The evaluation was conducted from a Sámi perspective on how the agreements affect the ability of herding communities to safeguard reindeer wellbeing. The overall conclusion is that the agreements provide some positive contributions to mitigate harm to the reindeer, but also contribute considerable risks. We argue that agreements might have a meaningful role to play in the integration of Sámi rights in land and resource decisions, but herding communities have considerable space to increase the range of clauses – guided by larger goals of Sámi self-determination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Improving a Swedish health practice for refugees through participatory action research: potentials and constraints.
- Author
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Fabri, Anna and Jobér, Anna
- Subjects
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HEALTH promotion , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research , *REFUGEES , *PARTICIPANT observation - Abstract
This paper reports on a two-year project focusing on health communicators working with refugees in Sweden. By employing participatory action research and the theory of practice architectures, the study examines a health information practice for newly arrived refugees and highlights its potentials and constraints. The joint meetings that occurred between the participating researcher and the health communicators during the project were the primary source for collaboration, development, and data collection. The findings show that perceptions of limitations due to existing power structures initially hindered the group from experimenting with new activities for the groups of refugees. However, as the communicators gained experience, the conversations in the joint meeting practice changed, which facilitated the action research process. By challenging common working methods, which were initially perceived as causes for concern, the communicators recognised that the concretisation of the health information they wanted to convey could also function as a useful pedagogical tool. The analysis shows that, despite constraints during the working process, the participatory action research practice created a democratic work process which empowered all participants. Collective talks in the communicative space nurtured an architecture that generated new ideas and made it possible to leave the classroom-based teaching situation for new ways of learning about health and physical activity. The findings also show that participatory action research made the communicators aware of their capacity to implement change by offering various movement-based activities that benefited the participating refugees and increased their agency and empowerment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Our ancestors: the Cimbri, Goths and Sarmatians. Three ethnogenetic legends in early modern Europe.
- Author
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Szelągowska, Krystyna
- Subjects
- *
EARLY modern history , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *INTELLECTUAL history , *GENETIC distance , *WITCHCRAFT , *ANCESTORS - Abstract
The study presented here is an attempt at a comparative analysis of three early modern phenomena in the history of ideas and culture: three ethnogenetic theories about the origins of the Swedish (Gothic) and Polish (Sarmatian) nations and states, as well as that of the Danes, originating from the ancient Cimbri. First, they will be compared as historiographic concepts characteristic of early modern knowledge. The next part of the paper concerns modifications to these theories made in national historiographies and the broader visions of the history of the respective countries based on them. The last part of the study presents how these ideas function at the political level, both in relation to broader visions of political reality and political practice. The analysis suggests that while in the case of the 16th-century historical concepts of origo gentis, there are more similarities than differences, the subsequent stages of development show increasing differentiation: the ideas of Sarmatian ethnogenesis underwent greater changes than others. However, there are similarities in the way Gothic and Sarmatian ideas functioned in political life and politics during that period in Sweden and Poland, respectively. The weakest point is the influence of Cimbrian ethnogenesis on the politics of Denmark at that time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Do Moral Values Moderate the Relationship Between Immigrant-School Concentration and Violent Offending? A Cross-Level Interaction Analysis of Self-Reported Violence in Sweden.
- Author
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Vasiljevic, Zoran, Pauwels, Lieven, Nilsson, Eva-Lotta, Shannon, David, and Svensson, Robert
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VALUES (Ethics) , *VIOLENCE , *CRIME prevention , *DOMESTIC violence , *SEGREGATION in education , *EDUCATIONAL surveys , *INTIMATE partner violence - Abstract
The study examines whether school-level immigrant concentration is related to students' involvement in violence, and whether students' moral values moderate the relationship between immigrant concentration and violence. The study is based on six nationally representative school surveys conducted by the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention between 1999 and 2011, with a combined sample of 38,711 adolescents. We have combined different surveys to create one large pooled data set to evaluate segregation effects at the school level. Multilevel linear probability models are used to examine cross-level interaction effects. This study shows that contextual effects impact students differently, and that the relationship between immigrant concentration and violence is considerably stronger for adolescents with weak personal moral values. The paper provides empirical support for the differential vulnerability hypothesis. Policy and practice would benefit from a focus on the further development of programs and interventions that target personal moral values, not least in schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A climate report gone missing – power mechanisms in Swedish national transport planning.
- Author
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Eriksson, Linnea, Witzell, Jacob, Isaksson, Karolina, and Lindkvist, Christina
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CLIMATE change mitigation , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *SCANIA trucks , *CLIMATE change conferences - Abstract
While the technological development of vehicles and fuels is not adequate to meet current climate mitigation targets, infrastructure development also plays an important role in transforming the transport system. Previous studies have argued that conventional infrastructure planning is incapable of implementing climate mitigation. The aim of the paper is to provide insights into power means and mechanisms that counteract integration of climate mitigation targets in infrastructure planning. This is done by an in-depth case study of current Swedish national transport planning. This case provides a rich illustration of a situation with high political ambitions regarding climate mitigation on the one hand, and power mechanisms and resistance with regard to climate goals during the planning process on the other. The case is analysed using the perspective of power circuits and shows how forecasting works as an obligatory passage point, sorting in and out which analyses will be part of the decision-making material. Analyses which do not fit the forecasting model are dismissed from planning. The conclusion is that as long as the transport infrastructure planning practice is dependent on forecasting as the only central analysis there will be difficulties in changing the scope of infrastructure planning and making climate goals central for transport planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Does household indebtedness contribute to the decline of union density?
- Author
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Gouzoulis, Giorgos
- Subjects
- *
DEBT , *HOUSEHOLDS , *SOCIAL norms , *DENSITY , *REGRESSION analysis , *CONSUMER credit , *PERSONAL bankruptcy - Abstract
This paper argues that rising household indebtedness is associated with the decline of organised labour. Over the last decades, the financial system is increasingly financing working-class households, and recent research shows that indebted employees become more risk-averse at the workplace on the fear of losing their job and defaulting. Thus, since union formation or participation is commonly punished with redundancy, rising household indebtedness is likely to be associated with the aggregate reduction in unionisation. This study examines this argument for a high-, a mid-, and low-unionisation economy over the period 1965–2018: Sweden, Japan, and South Korea, respectively. Regression analysis provides robust support in favour of this argument. The results also suggest that financial regulation and social norms about personal insolvency matter for the size of the effects of household debt on unionisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Present state on the use of forensic genetic genealogy in criminal cases – a Swedish perspective.
- Author
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Ansell, Ricky and Aili Fagerholm, Siri
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINAL procedure , *GENETIC genealogy , *LAW enforcement - Abstract
Sweden was first outside North America in solving crime using forensic genetic genealogy (FGG), but further use of the method was inhibited due to unclear legislative support and subsequently method implementation has been delayed awaiting necessary legal amendments. This paper describes the present state of law enforcement use of FGG in Sweden and foresight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Present state on the use of forensic genetic genealogy in criminal cases – a Swedish perspective.
- Author
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Ansell, Ricky and Aili Fagerholm, Siri
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINAL procedure , *GENETIC genealogy , *LAW enforcement - Abstract
Sweden was first outside North America in solving crime using forensic genetic genealogy (FGG), but further use of the method was inhibited due to unclear legislative support and subsequently method implementation has been delayed awaiting necessary legal amendments. This paper describes the present state of law enforcement use of FGG in Sweden and foresight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Critical risk factors of electric road uptake on motorways: a Swedish Delphi study.
- Author
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Sällberg, Henrik and Numminen, Emil
- Subjects
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EXPRESS highways , *COST overruns , *FINANCIAL risk , *PUBLIC sector , *PRIVATE sector , *ROADS - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a ranking-type Delphi study on the critical risk factors for the adoption of an electric road system (e-road) for trucks on the main motorways in Sweden. The investment cost of such a system is high, necessitating an upfront evaluation of the adoption risk factors to reduce the likelihood of budget overruns and project delays. Participating Swedish e-road experts (N = 52) from the public sector, private sector, and academia identified 32 unique risk factors, which were divided into five categories. The three most critical risk factors, as ranked by the experts, were 'low expansion rate,' 'low utilization rate,' and 'lengthy public-sector evaluation.' Overall, market and financial risks were ranked as more important than institutional, technological, and sustainability risks. This study has important implications for policymakers in countries considering e-road adoption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Creating 'good' hospital to home transfers in the rural north of Sweden: informal workarounds and opportunities for improvement.
- Author
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Carson, Dean Bradley, Messmer, Ronja, and Leuf Fjällberg, Emmy
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MEDICAL quality control , *RURAL health services , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *HOME care services , *TRANSITIONAL care , *INTERVIEWING , *POPULATION geography , *NURSING theory , *DOCUMENTATION , *CONTINUUM of care , *COMMUNICATION , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITY assurance , *THEMATIC analysis , *ELDER care , *DISCHARGE planning , *OLD age - Abstract
Hospital to home transfers for older people require effective communication, coordination and collaboration across multiple service settings. Rural Nursing Theory and the Beyond Periphery model explain why this is particularly difficult in rural areas, but there are few examples of how rural services respond. This paper presents a case study of the district of Tärnaby in the inland north of Sweden. Data are drawn from interviews with health and care staff in Tärnaby, observations, and experiences of the researchers. Data were analyzed thematically, with four main themes emerging – role clarity, communication, geography, and understanding of the rural context. Responses to challenges included increasing opportunities for communication between service providers and improving documentation. The paper concludes that informal "workarounds" run the risk of further disconnecting rural service settings from "the city". Rather, the aim needs to be to improve contextual understanding through formally incorporating "the rural" in service design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Challenges for public-service delivery: the case of Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy.
- Author
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Lindvall, Johannes and Rönnerstrand, Björn
- Subjects
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VACCINE hesitancy , *COVID-19 vaccines , *COVID-19 pandemic , *POLITICAL affiliation , *SOCIAL goals - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to identify the most vaccine-hesitant groups in a contemporary democratic state, Sweden. We rely on two representative surveys that were conducted in 2020 and that asked Swedish citizens how likely they were to accept immunization with a Covid-19 vaccine if one were offered to them. Using clustering methods, we find a wide variety of vaccine-hesitant groups, with the highest levels of vaccine hesitancy among individuals who combine low personal health risks with political orientations and ideological convictions that are associated with antivaccinationist attitudes. The paper's findings have important implications for public-health policy and, more broadly, for theories of how governments can convince individual citizens to play their part in achieving important social goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Sweden paradox: US far-right fantasies of a dystopian utopia.
- Author
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Åkerlund, Mathilda
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT-wing extremism , *ISLAMOPHOBIA , *RACIAL identity of white people , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
This paper analyses how Sweden has come to be imagined and represented on the websites of US far right organisations since the start of the so-called 'migration crisis' of 2015. It focused specifically on when Sweden is discussed by the US far right and in relation to what events, and what values and associations are attributed to Sweden. The analysis showed that news events were not reported on by US far-right organisations as they took place in Sweden but instead appropriated and accentuated when they could be used to make certain points directed at the audiences of these organisations. Furthermore, the findings showed that the texts tended to focus on scaremongering about Muslim immigrants and Islam in ways that highly resembled those of the European far right. The paper discusses how such framing helps the international far right form a coherent narrative and all-applicable template for the problems of Muslims facing the Western world. Finally, the analysis showed how Sweden is positioned in a complex juxtaposition: as something both good and bad; superior while also inferior; a great nationalist role model but also a warning example, and how Swedish whiteness plays a central role in these depictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Disclosing the logics of non-statutory regional planning: the case of Sweden.
- Author
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Bergkvist Andersson, Hilda and Schmitt, Peter
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL planning , *DEGREES of freedom , *SUSTAINABLE development , *REGIONAL development , *LOGIC - Abstract
In many European countries, regional planning is an established institutional framework. In recent years we have observed a resurgent research interest in regional planning with a specific focus on governance and institutional design and on the strategic and practical relevance of regional planning in pursuing sustainable development. However, in Sweden, regional planning traditionally has a weak position in practice as well as in research. Yet over the past 15 years, we have seen an increasing political interest in experimenting with different forms and formats of regional planning. In this paper, we explore the emerging logics of non-statutory regional planning, which the majority of Swedish regions have chosen. Drawing upon a qualitative research design we identify, compare and discuss three different logics and their inherent rationales, practices, challenges and prospects. Our analysis shows that our three case regions can do very little non-statutory regional planning unless they are part of properly working multi-level networks, and have well-established regional informal arenas for interaction and political backing. More specifically, we point at a number of tensions caused by the large degree of freedom to design non-statutory regional planning, which foster conflicts, confusion and insecurity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Meaning-making in the practice of collaboration: how implicit normative structures guide collaborative processes around contested natural resource issues.
- Author
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Westberg, Lotten, Bergeå, Hanna, and Hallgren, Lars
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL resources , *SOCIAL processes , *REINDEER - Abstract
Although communication is considered crucial for collaboration in natural resource management (NRM), its role has so far been superficially studied. In this paper, we present a way to investigate this communication by focusing on its implicit aspects. We observed and examined communication in three processes that aimed to find solutions to predator-reindeer problems through collaboration between reindeer herders and wildlife authorities in northern Sweden. Despite the three processes sharing the same external and internal conditions, they developed in completely different directions. We explain this by considering each process as a social practice and identifying the character of the normative structures guiding its members' sense-making and action. We show how the structures emerged, were reproduced and affected the course of events and outcomes of each process. We conclude that recognising the significance of the implicit aspects of communication offers novel opportunities to better understand collaboration in NRM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. How justice shapes transition governance – a discourse analysis of Swedish policy debates.
- Author
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Fischer, Anke, Joosse, Sofie, Strandell, Jacob, Söderberg, Nora, Johansson, Kornelia, and Boonstra, Wiebren Johannes
- Subjects
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DISCOURSE analysis , *POLICY analysis , *SOCIAL boundaries , *SOCIAL cohesion , *PROCEDURAL justice - Abstract
In both policy-making and academia, the realisation is growing that transitions striving for sustainability have to be just to be socially accepted. This insight has given rise to institutionalised approaches to a "just transition" – but also beyond these, justice is a key challenge in the governance of sustainability transitions. In this paper, we examine how justice arguments are being used in national-level discourses of transition governance in Sweden. Analysing 121 policy-related documents from 2019 to 2021, we found that justice was discursively treated in a way that essentially stifled change. Political actors attempted to trump each other's justice claims rather than to genuinely engage with them. Justice concerns that would not serve re-election, such as solidarity across social boundaries, were almost absent from the material. Based on these findings, we critically explore how justice arguments contribute to politicizing transition governance in particular ways, rendering some policy options impossible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Understanding how place is addressed in research on young people's political action: cases from Sweden.
- Author
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Adolfsson, Maja and Coe, Anna-Britt
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG adults , *POLITICAL participation , *URBAN youth , *PUBLIC demonstrations , *POLITICAL socialization , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
Following recent critiques of the metrocentric nature of global youth studies, this paper explores the role of place in current research on youth political action in Sweden. Drawing on Agnew's [2011. "Chapter 23: Space and Place." In Handbook of Geographical Knowledge, edited by J. Agnew, and D. Livingstone. London: Sage] concept of place and using qualitative interpretive review as our method, we examined three sets of research publications on three different aspects of youth political action in Sweden. Our analysis found that place was addressed differently in each set of publications: youth political socialization and civic engagement were approached as placeless, street protests were examined as place assumed and urban justice movements were studied as place-based. The first two sets of publications contribute to reproducing a metrocentric understanding of youth political action, where urban areas are constructed as the key settings for political action among young people, while rural or peripheral areas are assumed to work in the same way or are depicted as non-political. By contrast, the publications on urban justice movements offered an alternative by exploring political action as place-based. The need to study the place-specific ways that young people do politics is discussed, with its potential to further the understanding of how young people do politics from where they are. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Mechanisms of threat: How Finland and Sweden abandoned non-alignment.
- Author
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Savolainen, Anna
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *MILITARY history - Abstract
Finland and Sweden are two countries with long histories of military non-alignment. In 2022, after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, both countries swiftly decided to apply for membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Why and how does such a drastic policy change come about? In this paper, I assess realist theory of threat and show that despite their apparent similarity, the reactions of the Nordic nonaligned to the Russian aggression differed significantly. Finland immediately sought protection from NATO, while Sweden attempted to continue non-alignment. Ultimately, the two countries reached the same alignment conclusion through different causal mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Facilitators and barriers along pathways to higher education in Sweden: a disability lens.
- Author
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Taneja-Johansson, Shruti
- Subjects
- *
STUDENTS with disabilities , *HIGHER education , *YOUNG adults , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ECONOMIC security , *DISABILITIES - Abstract
The salience of education for better life outcomes is well accepted, but people with disabilities continue to be underrepresented in higher education. Building on Weedon's approach to the intersection of impairment with socioeconomic factors, this paper identifies the facilitators and barriers encountered and/or experienced by young people with disabilities along their diverse pathways to and through higher education in Sweden. The data comes from longitudinal ethnographic case studies of persons with ADHD. While the findings show similarities in impairment-specific barriers, such as transition and inadequate support available at university, they make even more visible the existing heterogeneity among people with ADHD and the inadequacy of support structures at higher education institutions. Parents, economic security and individual factors, such as ease of learning and belief in one's own capacity, were found to be strong facilitators. ADHD and socioeconomic disadvantage together magnified vulnerabilities and hurdles faced while aspiring to and accessing higher education. The article concludes by highlighting the urgent need for universities to change entrenched structures that perceive students with disabilities as a homogeneous group and disability as an individual problem, in order to enable participation of all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The agrifood-migration nexus: migration regimes and the politics of labour shortages in Italy and Sweden.
- Author
-
Corrado, Alessandra, Pisacane, Lucio, and Alarcón Ferrari, Cristián
- Subjects
- *
ETHNIC studies , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *COVID-19 pandemic , *MIGRANT labor - Abstract
The COVID-19 crisis has put the spotlight on the role of migrant workers as 'essential' for agrifood systems in Europe and elsewhere. The paper compares Italy and Sweden in terms of the interplay between labour shortages in agriculture and the policies facing migrant workers' exploitation within their respective agrifood systems. Our cases show how labour shortages are politically constructed and have become a key issue in the possibility for migrants to integrate within the current corporate-environment food regime. There are clear indications that a shift in agriculture is reshaping migration policymaking; with important consequences for how labour migration is being redefined and the impact on the future of agrifood systems in Europe. We conclude that national migration policy responses are politically conditioned by the way governments use state mechanisms and regulation to implement decisions produced by ideological positions on the future of labour, agriculture and food supply at the national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Changes in the governance of the reading subject: Swedish reading policy, c.1949–1984.
- Author
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Lindsköld, Linnéa and Hedemark, Åse
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL policy , *HISTORICAL analysis , *SOCIOLOGICAL research , *DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
This paper analyses significant changes in the political rationality underpinning Sweden's official reading policy between the 1940s and 1980s. Using official inquiry reports as empirical material and drawing on a discourse analytical method, we examine policy changes regarding ideal readers (what reading should result in) and administrative practices (what policy actions could be used) and the kinds of academic knowledge that was used to justify specific measures. It is found that official reading policy ceased to be limited to distributing literature and expanded to include active reading promotion. The replacement of sociological perspectives by cognitive viewpoints as constituting knowledge is also noted. It is concluded that changes in the political rationality had consequences for how the individual reader was construed, from a subject with the potential to change society to a subject who had to adjust to society. We argue that the cultivation of readers evident in reading policy constitutes a specific technique of governance not sufficiently considered in previous cultural policy research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Sensing the breakdown: managing complexity at the railway.
- Author
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Cort, Rebecca and Lindblom, Jessica
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOTECHNICAL systems , *REMOTE control , *NATURAL resources , *SENSES , *RAILROADS - Abstract
This paper explores the complex and time-critical work practices within operational train traffic in Sweden by reporting on an incident causing an infrastructure breakdown and large traffic disruptions. Based on a workplace study approach, we report on how the control room workers – train traffic controllers and information officers – grasp, make sense of, and handle the consequences of the incident as it unfolds in real-time. We portray how the workers develop and acquire a sense of place in relation to the incident's severity which is essential for successfully handling the situation. By introducing the 'sense of place' concept originally derived from the field of natural resources to the domain of operational train traffic, we provide a deepened understanding of the challenges characterising remote control work from a safety-critical socio-technical systems perspective. Finally, reflections on the application of the 'sense of place' concept, safety aspects and directions for future research are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Work life complexity no longer on the rise: trends among 1930s–1980s birth cohorts in Sweden.
- Author
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Westerman, Johan, Witteveen, Dirk, Bihagen, Erik, and Shahbazian, Roujman
- Subjects
- *
QUALITY of work life , *GENDER , *TWENTIETH century , *PRODUCTIVE life span - Abstract
There is a conception that contemporary work lives become ever more complex. Pioneering research has indicated that work lives have indeed become more complex, yet at a modestly increasing pace. This paper uses Swedish registry data across an exceptionally long time period, including cohorts born from 1931 to 1983. The following conclusions are drawn using state-of-the-art methods of measuring sequence complexity. For early-careers, an increasing complexity trend is evident between the 1950s and 1960s birth cohorts, yet complexity fluctuates around a stable trend for the 1970s birth cohorts and onward. For mid-careers, which are considerably more stable on average, complexity has decreased among women born between the 1930s and the early-1950s. However, the opposite trend holds true for men, resulting in a gender convergence in work complexity. We observe a subsequent standstill of the mid-career complexity trend across both genders, followed by a modest decline for the last observed cohorts. Analyses point to educational expansion as an important driver of the initial increase of early-career complexity. Taken together, this study affirms an initial shift to more work life complexity in the twentieth century, yet we find no unidirectional trend toward more complexity over the last decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The role of demand in regional industrial path development – examples from the Swedish periphery.
- Author
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Martin, Roman and Martin, Hanna
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIALIZATION , *REGIONAL development , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *GOVERNMENT purchasing , *MICROBREWERIES - Abstract
This paper deals with the role that demand can play in regional industrial transformation, focusing on new industry formation in peripheral regions. As we argue in this paper, demand can be an important driver for industrial transformation, yet often underscored in the literature on regional development. Demand includes aspects related to general consumption patterns, to co-development between users and producers, to public procurement, or to norms and values among consumers. Theory building departs from accounts on new path development, were peripheral regions are typically seen as providing unfavourable conditions for industrial transformation, due to a weak organizational and institutional endowment. The empirical analysis focusses on two cases of new regional industrial path development in Värmland, a peripheral region in Sweden, namely locally processed dairy products, as well as microbreweries. The analysis is based on in interviews with regional entrepreneurs and industry stakeholders. We highlight the multiple roles that demand has played in the renewal and creation these two new regional industrial growth paths in the Swedish periphery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Desiring the indigenous: affective commodification of the Sámi.
- Author
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Westberg, Gustav
- Subjects
- *
SAMI (European people) , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *COMMODIFICATION , *SOCIAL forces , *CONSUMERS - Abstract
This paper argues that the multimodal enactment of affect plays a key role in the commodification of indigenous cultures. Departing from an understanding of affect as integral to discourse, the paper investigates how indigenous cultures are construed as an object of consumerist desire by employing subject formation, strategic perspectivation and affordance as conceptual starting points. As a case in point, affective meaning-making is studied as it is semiotically materialized in the commodification of Sámi culture by the predominant actor in marketing indigenous experiences in Sweden. By pondering the social force of affective meaning-making from the perspective of the perceived consumer, the analysis reveals that consumers are invited to affectively encounter the Sámi through curiosity, tranquility and excitement. However, the paper contends that the representations not only enable positive emotions; they also work their social force by constraining engagement in any disturbing, conflicting or uncomfortable emotions that are associated with the post-colonial heritage of the Sámi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Voices of the forests. Eviction, control, and the birth of the 'Parish Lapp' system in early modern Sweden.
- Author
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Nordin, Jonas Monié and Olofsson, Sven
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL archaeology , *EVICTION , *FOWLING , *SAMI (European people) , *PARISHES , *EIGHTEENTH century - Abstract
This paper examines the birth of the exploitative sockenlappssystemet (the 'Parish Lapp' system) in central Sweden during the early eighteenth century. Based on a foundation of control and eviction instituted in earlier laws, the 1720s saw a forceful rise in royal concern over the existence of nomadic Sámi in central Sweden. His Majesty King Fredrik I specifically expressed fear of damage to the resources of the forests through Sámi hunting, especially bird hunting. The period between 1720 and 1730 saw King Fredrik corresponding with the Royal Council, the county governors, and some groups of Sámi agents. The council sought to evict the Sámi and move them or have them move to the lappmarker. The Sámi agents claimed birth right and asserted that Sámi in central Sweden had no relationship to either the land or the Sámi in the northern part of the realm. This paper uses a historical anthropological perspective, based on a wide set of sources, including historical archaeology, history, and ethnography, in order to paint a bigger picture of the conflicted situation that led to the founding of the unique system of forced indenture: the so-called Parish Lapp system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Summary of Papers.
- Author
-
Dunbar, Michael J.
- Subjects
- *
TOTAL knee replacement , *HEALTH - Abstract
Presents a summary of papers for the study of knee arthroplasty in Sweden. Patient satisfaction after knee arthroplasty; Questionnaires for knee arthroplasty; Comaprison of patient satisfaction with general health and disease specific questionnaires.
- Published
- 2001
40. Faux Feminism? A Reply to Mia Liinason's Position Paper.
- Author
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Gemzöe, Lena
- Subjects
- *
GENDER studies , *QUEER theory , *BINARY gender system - Abstract
The author comments on the article "Institutionalized Knowledge: Notes on the Processes of Inclusion and Exclusion in Gender Studies in Sweden," by Mia Liinason published in the previous issue of the "Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research." He is critical of the argument that gender studies in Sweden, promotes the view that men and women are opposite/binary categories. Further, comments on the criticism regarding the presentation of queer theory in her book "Feminism," is also presented.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. What Occupational Therapists Consider to be Worth Knowing: An Analysis of Swedish Occupational Therapists' Examination Papers 1984-96.
- Author
-
Bjorklund, Anita, Borell, Lena, and Svensson, Tommy
- Subjects
- *
OCCUPATIONAL therapists , *EXAMINATIONS - Abstract
The aim of this study was to analyse the 1984-96 examination papers of a group of experienced occupational therapists with regard to their research interests, and especially to ontological and strategic matters. The title pages, summaries and discussions of results of 84 papers were analysed qualitatively and quantitatively, with the starting point of two of the components from Törnebohm's structure of paradigms: the world view and the field of action view components. The occupational therapists' interest in research subjects related to the field of action view component of paradigms and applied research on strategic matters dominated the material. The interest in research subjects related to the world view component of paradigms and basic research on ontological matters increased over the last 5-year period. The increasing interest in more ontological matters seems to be natural and necessary progress for a profession that is deeply involved in knowledge acquired by experience. Only by the development of a “double-edged” knowledge will it be possible for the profession to develop and adapt to future demands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Older People's “Voices”—On Paper: Obstacles to Influence in Welfare States—A Case Study of Sweden.
- Author
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Persson, Tove and Berg, Stig
- Subjects
- *
OLDER people , *WELFARE state , *ELDER care , *INFLUENCE , *OLD age assistance , *SATISFACTION - Abstract
The official rhetoric of welfare states unconditionally pays tribute to older people's right to express dissatisfaction. In practice, users of older services in welfare states may be deprived of their “exit” options and face considerable constraints when it comes to raising their “voices.” For example, when older people in nursing homes would like to lodge a complaint, they may well be referred to the very staff members they depend on in their everyday lives. This article analyzes a national case study in which these contradictory tendencies are especially explicit: formal influence channels for older people in Sweden. Using data from structured interviews with 100 representatives of Swedish municipalities and drawing on Hirschman's (1970) theory on exit and voice, the article analyzes obstacles to older service users' influence in Sweden and develops explanations for these obstacles in terms of social contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. SeaWiFS data analysis and match-ups with in situ chlorophyll concentrations in Danish waters An updated version of a paper originally presented at Oceans from Space 'Venice 2000' Symposium , Venice, Italy, 9-13 October 2000.
- Author
-
Jørgensen, P. V.
- Subjects
- *
DETECTORS , *CHLOROPHYLL , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
For the year 1999 all Sea viewing Wide Field of view Sensor (SeaWiFS) scenes of the Danish waters from the North Sea to the Baltic Sea were browsed, and a total of 47 SeaWiFS scenes with reasonably low cloud cover and, therefore, potential in situ match-ups were found and processed. The in situ data used as match-ups were collected on routine monitoring cruises by Danish and Swedish environmental authorities. A few stations in the North Sea, Skagerak and the western Baltic Sea were sampled, while most stations were located in Kattegat and the inner Danish waters. A turbid water SeaWiFS atmospheric correction algorithm was applied, since the standard SeaWiFS algorithm for chlorophyll- a (CHL) has been shown to be fairly inaccurate in turbid coastal waters. This is due to both inaccurate atmospheric and to relatively high and variable abundance of yellow substance. The application of the turbid atmospheric correction substantially improved the SeaWiFS CHL estimates. Regressions between SeaWiFS estimates using the OC2 and OC4 algorithms used in the SeaDAS software (versions 3.3 and 4.0, respectively) and in situ CHL values were made as well, and regression with a number of other possible reflectance ratios with SeaWiFS channels. The best correlation was found to be R 2 =0.54 using a double-ratio algorithm using both R510/R555 and R443/R670, while the OC4v4 had the second best correlation of R 2 =0.39. Among other single ratios, the R510/R555 had the highest correlation with CHL, which was expected since this is also the ratio that OC4v4 most often switches to in the waters investigated here. The range of CHL concentrations in this study was rather limited (all but three points from 0.5-3 mg m -3 ) so there is a need for inclusion of more data to expand the concentration range. This should be possible using also data from 2000, 2001 and onwards and, hereafter, a more 'stable' empirical algorithm can be derived for the Danish waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A field method to estimate the uncertainty of RTK measurements.
- Author
-
Alizadeh-Khameneh, Amin, Horemuž, Milan, Andersson, Johan Vium, Wahlund, Sara, and Jämtnäs, Lars
- Subjects
- *
CONSTRUCTION projects , *UNCERTAINTY (Information theory) , *COST estimates , *GLOBAL Positioning System - Abstract
The expected accuracies obtainable with Network Real-Time Kinematic (NRTK) measurements are of interest to surveyors working on construction projects. This study introduces an NRTK-based free stationing method called RUFRIS (Real Time Updated Free Station) which is independent from physically marked points. Integration of total station distance and direction observations with NRTK measurements enables uncertainty estimation of both total station and surveyed NRTK points. In Sweden, NRTK is conducted using the national network of permanent reference stations with different densifications (10, 35, 70 km). This paper investigates the applicability of the RUFRIS-method to estimate the uncertainty of NRTK measurements in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Making Techno-Economic Rationality Work: Tensions in Technology-Enabled Social Service Evaluations.
- Author
-
Hasselblad, Annika, Zimic, Sheila, and Sundberg, Leif
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATE culture , *DECISION support systems , *SOCIAL workers , *QUALITATIVE research , *FOCUS groups , *MANAGEMENT information systems , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL services , *INTERVIEWING , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PROFESSIONS , *SOUND recordings , *TECHNOLOGY , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH , *TRUST , *QUALITY assurance , *SOCIAL support , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRACTICAL politics , *GROUNDED theory , *MANAGEMENT , *CONFLICT management ,SOCIAL service associations - Abstract
Contemporary welfare organizations engage in various evaluation practices to assess the quality of their services. In this paper we report a qualitative exploration of how technology-enabled evaluations are understood by organizational members who participate in quality assurance activities in Swedish social services. The study contributes to critical information systems literature, focusing on the tensions professionals experience in relation to the digital systems they use for evaluations. For example, "quantities" take precedence over the qualities of such work, as information systems constrain ambitions to realize knowledge-based social services. The results reveal three tensions in professionals' evaluation-related activities arising from conflicting uses or desires. One is between desires for flexible systems that enable reflection and standardized digital support systems. Another is between uses or desires for indicators that are meaningful at the operational level and for general, comparable measures at the management level. The third is between desires to use evaluation procedures for learning and control. The study contributes to both theory and practice related to technology-enabled evaluation of welfare services, and critical perspectives on information systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Public funding and destination evolution in sparsely populated Arctic regions.
- Author
-
Bohn, Dorothee, Carson, Doris A., Demiroglu, O. Cenk, and Lundmark, Linda
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL development , *TOURIST attractions , *TOURISM websites , *FOOD tourism , *TOURISM - Abstract
This paper examines the role of public funding in transforming tourism pathways in sparsely populated Arctic destinations, comparing Northern Sweden and Finnish Lapland. Our theoretical framework considers destination path plasticity and moments of change through the lens of geographical political economy to understand patterns of uneven development. This perspective helps explain how regional development funding driven by multi-scalar political priorities and global markets set structural conditions for tourism. We present a spatial analysis of public funding between 2007 and 2021 for private firms and public projects, complemented by document analysis and expert interviews. We find that public funding in Finnish Lapland has largely reinforced 'Arctification' and export-driven tourism in a few locations. In Northern Sweden, it has focused more on redistributing resources to micro-businesses and broader socio-economic development in lagging regions, yet with limited impacts on changing dominant tourism pathways. Public projects improved knowledge creation and networking among public and private actors but were largely unable to consolidate emerging pathways in the long run. Overall, regional development funding supported incremental change around existing pathways and had limited transformative effects in response to shocks or disruptive moments due to the rigid nature of funding programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Recent Advancements in the Riddarholmen Ship Puzzle: A New Interpretation of the Architecture of an Early 16th-Century Clinker-Built Gun-Carrying Warship.
- Author
-
Eriksson, Niklas
- Subjects
- *
WARSHIPS , *SHIPS , *PUZZLES , *NAVAL warfare , *NAVAL architecture , *CROSSWORD puzzles - Abstract
The 16th-century Riddarholmen Ship was discovered in the middle of Stockholm in 1930. Despite being exhibited since 1947, the efforts to reconstruct the ship have been limited. A substantial portion of the recovered parts has never been put on display. This paper aims to shed new light on the ship's architecture using the original material from the excavation together with an inventory of the timbers in the collections of the Medieval Museum. From this, it is argued that the ship originally had a full deck, three masts, and a forecastle and that it resembles an early purpose-built, gun-carrying warship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Towards a cordial dialogue between lifestyle migration/mobilities and rural tourism geographies.
- Author
-
Eimermann, Marco and Carson, Doris A.
- Subjects
- *
RURAL geography , *RURAL tourism , *GEOGRAPHY , *DEMOGRAPHY , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PRECARITY - Abstract
This article introduces the special issue Changing dimensions of lifestyle mobilities in turbulent times: impacts of COVID-19 outbreaks and multiple crises. It aims not just to understand the individual drivers and consequences of mobility but their interactions with local manifestations of spatial (in)justice in various meaningful places. This editorial synthesizes the four studies of population flows in proximate and remote rural areas in Europe, and puts their contributions to the fields of lifestyle migration and mobilities in context. We introduce the lifestyle migration hub meeting that inspired this special issue and a mobility spectrum around which the article revolves. We then indicate common interests of lifestyle migration and rural tourism geographies, focusing on the contributors' use of human geographic perspectives and aided by observations from ongoing ethnographic work about the demographic future of small villages in northern Sweden. A discussion of multiple disruptions, precarity and vulnerability is linked with a review of the papers before elaborating on destinations and communities as meaningful but vulnerable places. The conclusion outlines how concerns with people's and place's vulnerability and precarity in multiple disruptions to mobility flows can be further explored in cordial dialogue between scholars of lifestyle migration/mobility and tourism geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Social impact assessments (SIA) in larger infrastructure investments in Sweden; the view of experts and practitioners.
- Author
-
Stjernborg, Vanessa
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL impact assessment , *INFRASTRUCTURE funds , *PUBLIC spaces , *GOVERNMENT purchasing , *SOCIAL sustainability , *SOCIAL planning - Abstract
This paper, by highlighting the experiences and reflections of experts and practitioners, aims to increase knowledge of how social impact assessment is managed and handled at various stages of the planning process in major infrastructure investments in Sweden. Interviews were conducted with nine experts and practitioners working with issues of transport planning and social sustainability. The informants represent the national and regional level and three established consultancies. The results largely confirm earlier research, and the area of social impacts assessment in transport planning in Sweden can be seen as being fragmented. Many fundamental issues in the field remain to be addressed for future development, including issues such as public procurement, the role (and competence) of the client, the role (and competence) of the practitioner, how SIA should be included in the whole planning process taking into account the different stages (including how the SIA should be documented, delivered and monitored), how methods should be managed and included, and how the genuine experts should be included, i.e. those living and working in the affected areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A systematic review of CDIO knowledge library publications (2010 – 2020): An Overview of trends and recommendations for future research.
- Author
-
O'Connor, Sean, Power, Jason, and Blom, Nicolaas
- Subjects
- *
BLENDED learning , *EDUCATION research , *ENGINEERING education , *LIBRARIES - Abstract
The Conceiving – Designing – Implementing – Operating (CDIO) Initiative identifies itself as a global educational framework for producing the next generation of engineers. The purpose of this systematic review is to provide an overview of trends and to consider how these may be optimised for the continued evolution of the initiative. This systematic review follows PRISMA guidelines and is preregistered on The Open Science Framework (OSF). The review includes all publications within the CDIO knowledge library between 2010 and 2020 (N = 898). Each of the publications was categorised as Advances in CDIO, CDIO Implementation and Engineering Educational Research. The initial screening identified the popularity of publishing articles discussing CDIO implementation and the notable decline in CDIO publications. A second screening took place that included all the publications in the Engineering Educational Research category. Some of the findings include: 1) 43% of publications have links with Nordic institutions. 2) Sweden is the most active country. 3) 81% of the publications are completed collaboratively; however, only 22% are cross institutional collaborations. The paper concludes with three main suggestions for future research: 1) Enhancing evidence-based practice 2) Support of blended learning research and 3) Further development of collaboration & replication efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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