About the project
Three areas are chosen to focus upon:
- Mechanisms and patterns of institutional change
- A limited set of institutions
- Democracy as constitutive of processes in modern society.
Empirically, the emphasis of the research is on the society of the Scandinavian type. Scandinavian societies have a government that is strong and liberal at a time, making social life differs from the basic features of the international literature. This requires extensive comparative perspectives.
Objectives
The project is divided into three main parts:
Part A clarifies normative theory of democracy and theory of institutional change. A major inspiration for democratic theory is John Rawls' normative theory which addresses specific institutions, such as public organs, employment and welfare. The understanding of institutional change is developed in the light of theories of variations in capitalism and welfare regimes.
Part B goes into the changes in public life. One line points towards to general problems related to freedom of expression and political communication, rationality grounds and standards for political debate. Another points towards effects of new social media, both in mobilizing people to participate in democratic society and in the flow of information in society.
Part C addresses institutional change at work and in the welfare state, and what characterizes Scandinavia, compared with Continental Europe and the Anglo-American world. Typologies that separate these forms are well known, but are predominantly static. The project will better understand the dynamics, and thus what creates stability and change in the Nordic combination of work and welfare.
The project builds on extensive empirical research at all three collaborative institutions.
Cooperation
The project is a collaboration between the Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo, Institute for Social Research, and Fafo
Funding scheme
The total grant award was for NOK 2 874 000.
- Insitution of sociology's prioritized projects (ISPSAM)
- The Research Council of Norway
Project period
October 2014 - December 2017