2005-04-14

a briefing and another event

It's all go on the Scandinavian front. There are two more items for your attention.


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1. EU CONSTITUTION. Having got its fingers burnt so painfully in 2003 on the euro, the Swedish government is determined to resist the rumbling pressure (eg, www.folkomrostning.nu) for a referendum on the constitution. The Danish government has much less room for manoevre in that respect.

For a concise and interesting report on the Danish situation, you could do a lot worse than read "A Perilous Democratic Exercise: The Referendum on the Constitutional Treaty in Denmark", by Catharina Sørensen and Anne Mette Vestergaard. It's a contribution to the Constitutional Ratification Monitor that's run by the European Policy Institutes Network, and the paper can found on the institute's homepage (www.epin.org).
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2. Then there's a very interesting-looking seminar next week.

THE EURO-OUTSIDERS AND THE POLITICS OF ASYMMETRY: FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

EWC WORKSHOP (in association with the Journal of European Integration)

Arts and Social Sciences Graduate Centre, 12 Abercromby Square, University of Liverpool

Thursday 21 April 2004

The workshop organised by the Europe and the World Centre (EWC) at The University of Liverpool and held in association with the Journal of European Integration represents the final part of a major research project that seeks to examine the common challenges and responses to those EU member states that are presently not members of the euro-area. The workshop provides an opportunity for information dissemination and for contributors to the project to present their key findings and conclusions to interested parties drawn from academia, public authorities and regional bodies and practitioners. The findings of the project have also been published in a special issue of the Journal of European Integration (March 2005).

1 – 2.30 pm Open Session 1: Introduction, Finnish and British EMU Studies

1 – 1.30 pm ‘Introduction: Euro-Outsiders and the Politics of Asymmetry’, Lee Miles (University of Liverpool and Karlstad University)

1.30 – 2.pm ‘Finland: Any Lessons for the Euro-Outsiders?’, Teija Tiilikainen (University of Helsinki)

2.- 2.30 pm ‘The United Kingdom: A Cautious Euro-Outsider’, Lee Miles (University of Liverpool and Karlstad University) and Gabriel Doherty (University of Hull)

2. 30 – 2.45 pm Coffee

2.45 - 3.45 Open Session 2; The Nordic Euro-Outsiders

2.45 – 3.15 ‘Denmark and European Monetary Integration: Out But Far From Over’, Martin Marcussen (University of Copenhagen)

3.15 – 3.45 ‘Sweden: The Twin Faces of a Euro-Outsider’, Rutger Lindahl (Göteborg University) and Daniel Naurin (Göteborg University)

3.45 – 4 pm Coffee

4 – 5 pm Open Session 3: Central and Eastern European Euro-Outsiders

‘The New Outsiders of Central and Eastern Europe – with Specific Reference to Poland’, Debra Johnson (University of Hull)

‘The Euro-Outsiders: Conclusions’, David Howarth (University of Edinburgh)

Funded by the European Commission as part of the The University of Liverpool’s Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence

Contact Lee Miles (L.S.Miles@liverpool.ac.uk) for further information.
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Best,

Nick Aylott.
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Dr Nicholas Aylott, research fellow (docent/forskarassistent) | Department of Political Science, Umeå University | www.pol.umu.se

Please feel free to forward this message to anyone who might be interested.
To join the Scandinavian Politics mailing list, send a message to me, the convenor (nicholas.aylott@pol.umu.se). If you want to send something to the list, or if you don't want to receive these occasional messages, just let me know.

2005-04-13

news and events

Here is an unusually large number of notices. They concern:

1. last week's PSA conference;
2. the Nansen Colloquium in Manchester;
3. a chair in Scandinavian Studies at University College London;
4. the Danish Social Democrats' new leader;
5. a new, feminist Swedish party;
6. welcome to new members of the list.

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1. PSA CONFERENCE. Thanks to all who took part - as paper-presenter, discussant or member of the audience - in our two panels on Scandinavian politics in Leeds last week. I thought they went very well.
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2. NANSEN COLLOQUIUM IN MANCHESTER...

...on the subject of 'Promoting Peace', to be held on Tuesday 3 May 2005 in Manchester, as part of the Nansen Series. The colloquium is to be hosted by the Manchester European Research Institute (MERI), Manchester Metropolitan University, in cooperation with the Royal Norwegian Embassy in London as part of the Series celebrating Norway's centennial as an independent nation.
Using experience from the Nordic region and the United Kingdom, the utility of 'peace processes' will be examined, using examples of the Balkans, Africa and Sri Lanka.

Speakers and discussants include: Vidar Helgesen, State Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Elisabeth Rehn, former UN Under-Secretary-General, Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Bosnia and Herzegovina; Miles Wickstead, DFID, London; Alyson Bailes, Director of the Stockholm Peace Research Institute; Geir Lundestad, Secretary of The Nobel Peace Prize Committee and Director of the Nobel Institute; Sverre Lodgaard, Director of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs.

The organizer is Clive Archer, Director of MERI, from whom more details can be obtained (c.archer@mmu.ac.uk).

The University Association for Contemporary European Studies can be found at http://www.uaces.org/
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3. A CHAIR IN SCANDINAVIAN STUDIES...

...is being advertised by University College London. "The successful candidate will have a distinguished international reputation in any area of Scandinavian/Nordic Studies." Further details can be found at UCL's website (www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/vacancies/adverts/AY1.html).
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4. NEWS: NEW LEADER OF THE DANISH SOCIAL DEMOCRATS

Last night, party members elected the first woman chair of the party organisation. "Gucci" Helle Thorning-Schmidt won 53% of the votes to the 47% obtained by her more leftish rival, Frank Jensen.

If anyone has time to write a quick commentary on the election, on Thorning-Schmidt and on the state of her faction-ridden party, please send it to me, and I'll gladly post it on the list.
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5. NEWS: FEMINIST PARTY IN SWEDEN

Since last week, and after months of rumours, Sweden has a new player, a "Feminist Initiative" (www.feministisktinitiativ.se), that aims to field candidates at the next election, in 2006. Not surprisingly, the group's leading figure - though formally, she's just one among 15 members of its executive - is Gudrun Schyman, former Left Party leader. Indeed, although there's been no programme worked out yet, the executive's members have a clearly radical-left profile. Perhaps slightly more surprisingly, the Initiative seems to want to build up a traditional-looking party organisation, with paid-up members and local chapters.

With the left bloc already struggling in the opinion polls, the Social Democrats, the Left and the Greens are all obviously unsettled by this newcomer. And, with the launch of yet another new entrant, a "Healthcare Party", apparently becoming likelier, we could be in for some fun in Swedish party politics.
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6. NEW MEMBERS OF THE LIST

Welcome to several new members of the list. The idea is to use it for sending out news, commentaries, book reviews, requests - whatever, really, as long as it has something to do with Nordic politics, public adminstration or international relations. If you have something for distribution, just send it to me, and I'll do the honours.

There is also a group meeting in the pipeline, some time this year. Further information will follow in due course.
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Best,

Nick.
--
Dr Nicholas Aylott, research fellow (docent/forskarassistent) | Department of Political Science, Umeå University | www.pol.umu.se

Please feel free to forward this message to anyone who might be interested.
To join the Scandinavian Politics mailing list, send a message to me, the convenor (nicholas.aylott@pol.umu.se). If you want to send something to the list, or if you don't want to receive these occasional messages, just let me know.

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