2010-12-22

NOPSA CONFERENCE 2011

On behalf of Nick Aylott please contact Nick or Kadri for further information.

 

NOPSA CONFERENCE 2011

August 19th-21st 2001, Vaasa, Finland

www.nopsa2011.abo.fi

 

Call for papers: deadline January 15th 2011

 

Models of Democracy: What Are They and Do They Travel?

 

Workshop leaders

 

Dr Nicholas Aylott

School of Social Sciences, Södertörn University, Sweden

sh.se/nicholasaylott, nicholas.aylott@sh.se

 

Dr Kadri Simm

Institute for Semiotics and Philosophy, University of Tartu, Estonia

 

This workshop would have two main objectives.

 

First, it would seek to develop our knowledge and understanding of different forms of democracy. These could be procedural forms - liberal, illiberal, direct, representative, party-centred, candidate-centred, deliberative and the like. Equally, they could be regionally or culturally specific, such as the European or Nordic "models" of democracy. What, if anything, is really distinctive about such models? What is to be gained analytically by constructing them? How closely do real-world cases conform to their precepts?

 

The second objective concerns the possible transmission of these precepts from one place to another. Policy diffusion is a well-established sub-field within political science. Somewhat less studied, however, though certainly not entirely neglected, has been the notion of institutional diffusion: the idea that political institutions can spread from one place to another, perhaps inducing a break with local practice. Under what conditions might this happen? Clearly, modern institutional theory is likely to be central to many of the workshops' contributions, though that leaves wide scope for various ways of defining and understanding political institutions. Post-communist democratisation in Europe is one area in which the application of an institutional-diffusion framework might be especially helpful.

 

The core of the panel would comprise participants in an ongoing international research project, the Nordic Model of Democracy (nmd-project.net), which investigates the relationships between democracy in the Nordic and Baltic states. The panel chairs are both members of the project team. However, we welcome papers that contribute to either or both of the two main objectives outlined above. A variety of methodological approaches is also encouraged.

 

In order to make our workshop as inclusive as possible, and especially with an eye to participation by scholars from the Baltic states, we would like its working language to be English, and we would expect most papers to be written in English. However, we are conscious of NOPSA's tradition of providing a forum in which Nordic scholars can present and discuss their work in their own Scandinavian languages, so our workshop would remain open to papers that are written in Danish, Norwegian or Swedish.

 

 

2010-11-23

Scandinavian Political Studies

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2010-11-16

SO, FAREWELL, THEN, MONA SAHLIN

An up-date from Nick Aylott on what is happening within the Swedish Social Democratic Party.

Malin

Avaiable online here http://www.thelocal.se/30228/20101115/

'Almost nothing was achieved under Sahlin'

Swedish Social Democracy yesterday became slightly more like a normal European political party. Its leader accepted the consequences of a disastrous election performance and resigned, thus finally concluding a rather weird period in which everyone in the party was looking at each other and waiting for someone else to act. Mona Sahlin thus notches up a series of records, including that of being the shortest-serving Social Democratic leader ever, and the first of the democratic era not to become prime minister.

Back in September, the Social Democrats suffered their' worst election result for nearly a century, which will probably presage their longest spell in opposition since they first entered government in 1920. Immediately afterwards, I had been very surprised at the party's apparent willingness to keep Sahlin as leader (and at her willingness to carry on). My inference was that you should never underestimate the Swedish labour movement's loyalty to its incumbent leader (or, indeed, Sahlin's own toughness). Remarkably, no party figure of any significance ever called for her to go.

But things began to unravel a couple of weeks ago. Even then, the criticisms were coded. Aftonbladet, a supportive newspaper, described the leadership question as "the elephant in the room", but left it at that. The same day, the head of the party's youth wing - displaying, incidentally, the sort of timing, judgement and luck that bode well for her own political future, and which consistently eluded Sahlin - called on the entire party leadership to put itself up for re-election at a special party congress. Again, she avoided direct criticism of any individual; but her call soon picked up support from high places in the party. Last week, and without getting clearance from the party's executive committee or party board, Sahlin declared that she too agreed with this "obvious" step, and that it should be undertaken at a special party congress to be held earlier than expected, perhaps in March next year. Uproar ensued, with Social Democrats openly applauding or criticising her move. A telephone meeting with the chairs of the party's regional units on Friday was adjourned until they could all physically meet, yesterday. Then she announced that she would not stand for re-election.

If you ask me, the bottom line is this. West European social democracy has deep-seated problems; the Swedish party is scarcely alone in experiencing hard times at the moment. Still, the Swedish case does seem to have peculiar difficulty in changing to address these problems - or, to use the usual social democratic parlance, to "renew" itself. The core of this difficulty is leadership, by which I am not chiefly referring to any personal qualities that Sahlin herself may or may not have.

Sahlin's own period as party chair involved an almost complete lack of leadership. Perhaps this was partly a reaction against her predecessor's rather heavy-handed style. But it may have more to do with the party's institutions (defined in a broad sense).

She did manage to pull the Social Democrats' education policy towards a position that was more in line with most voters' views. She was also responsible for the decision in 2008 to build a pre-electoral coalition with the two other left-of-centre parties (even if she was forced by her party to include the Left Party in that alliance, which proved electorally catastrophic). But as  regards other substantivepolicy areas, especially economi cs, nothing was achieved - and, even worse, it never became at all clear what Sahlin WANTED to achieve. The manner in which she was selected as leader never involved her having to declare her candidacy, never mind set out a platform for where she wanted to take the party. The policy-review commissions that she then launched were soon marginalised by inter-party negotiations with the Social Democrats' alliance partners. Her reaction to the election defeat in September was to call yet another investigative commission, with 50-odd members, fairly junior leaders and a leisurely timetable.

Another strange element in this strange saga is that both Social Democrats and journalists have repeatedly tried to distinguish between debate about policy and debate about leaders - as if the two are not inextricably connected. Political alternatives are packaged and presented by individuals. Their rival packages serve to shape views in a party (or any other organisation) about direction. Choices can then be made.

A rather interesting intra-party conflict broke out late last week, as Sahlin's authority slipped away. One former Social Democratic minister launched an amazingly personal attack on the party's shadow finance minister. He responded by trashing the policies that he had previously defended and setting out an alternative economic policy that pitched squarely for the political midfield. That may be precisely the sort of open debate, with various leadership contenders positioning themselves through outlining their own manifestos, that the party now needs - and which the previous leader-selection process bent over backwards to avoid.

We will see if the new selection committee, which the party council will confirm on December 4th, interprets its mandate in a different way, one that condones a debate between competing  candidates - as would be taken for granted in, say, the British Labour Party or even the Danish Social Democratic Party. In yet another twist to the tale, there is at present no front-runner to replace Sahlin, with, for example, as many as ten possibilities listed in today's Dagens Nyheter.

 

NA 2010-11-15

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

2010-10-18

PSA Annual Conference & 'Europe and the Swedish Election of September 19th 2010

The deadline for the PSA Annual Conference has now passed and the Specialist Group on Scandinavian Politics has submitted two panel proposals for the general conference and one panel proposal for the Postgraduate Conference. We look forward to hearing about the papers presented and hope to be able to organise a meeting for the specialist group at the Conference in April 2011. http://www.psa.ac.uk/2011/

 

Also for your information, attached is a new election briefing produced by the European Parties Elections and Referendums Network (EPERN) on 'Europe and the Swedish Election of September 19th 2010' by Nicholas Aylott (Södertörn University, Stockholm). Apologies for cross posting.

 

More about the European Parties Elections & Referendums Network can be found here: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/sei/1-4-2.html

 

Best wishes,

Malin & Lee

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

2010-09-21

Post-elections reflections

Post-election reflections from Nick Aylott:

A very stimulating post-election seminar organised by the Centre for Business and Policy Studies (SNS), which I attended today (Monday), has added to the reflections that have been aired by politicians and journalists about the remarkable outcome of the Swedish election yesterday.

It goes without saying that much of the discussion was about the breakthrough of the SWEDEN DEMOCRATS into parliament with 20 seats.

No one suggests doing anything other than isolating them in parliament, despite the conciliatory comments of the Sweden Democrats' leader, Jimmie Åkesson, on TV last night. (The Left Party leader refused to sit in the same make-up room as Åkesson before their appearances on Swedish Television.) But there is a divide about how the political mainstream ought to react.

One lot wants simply to "fight racism". For example, a leading Green talked repeatedly about resisting the Sweden Democrats' "depiction of reality", by which he meant that they should not be allowed to set the policy agenda in the way that the Danish People's Party has in Denmark. But there are others who fear that this means, in practice, a continuation of the mainstream parties' reluctance to discuss at all the issues that the Sweden Democrats have exploited so successfully. One speaker at today's seminar advocated explicitly a much franker debate about both the benefits and the problems that immigration has involved.

Then there's the PARLIAMENTARY SITUATION, in which the governing Alliance seems set to end up, agonisingly, three seats short of a majority. The government has said all along that, in this sort of situation, it would approach the Greens about a deal, and it confirmed today that it will do so once all the pre-election-day votes are counted and the final result is clear, on Wednesday. Could we, then, see a four-party coalition acquiring a fifth member? Could the Greens' leaders be tempted by the prospect of ministerial jobs here and now, rather than four years in the political wilderness? Might they have become so exasperated by association with the Left Party's toxic brand that they're prepared to abandon their red-green allies?

Probably not. Committing your party to one of two rival pre-electoral coalitions, and then defecting to the other one as soon as yours loses, would be pretty hard to sell to members and voters. But that leaves the government in a dreadful bind. It's not really a question of how it will survive in office as a minority, but rather how it will manage anything beyond that. Let's say that it proposes a fifth increment in its flagship policy, the earned-income tax credit. The red-greens, of course, say no. But the Sweden Democrats turn round and say yes, all right. What does the government do then? As my colleague Flemming Juul Christiansen has shrewdly put it, "we imagine a situation in which a party, however much disliked by the others, unconditionally and without any bargaining, support proposals of the government. Will then the very fact that such a party supports the proposal become a problem for the proposal in itself?" The short answer is: yes.

Parliament reopens on October 5th. Inter-party discussions before then will be fascinating and, indeed, gripping.

Naturally, the SOCIAL DEMOCRATS' disastrous performance, their worst for 96 years, was also a hot topic at the seminar.

Say what you like about the party leader, Mona Sahlin, you can never write her off. She was very clear last night about the Social Democrats' "very bad" result. Yet it seems that she intends to carry on in her job, and there is no immediate indication that her party wants to kick out its sitting leader, which would be a first. Still, there is some acknowledgement that the Social Democrats didn't do well from their alliance with the Greens and, especially, the Left. Perhaps now the party will have the far-reaching debate about its future that it signally avoided after the resignation of Sahlin’s predecessor.

Above all, it has to re-establish a connection with the prosperous bits of Sweden, especially in the big cities, where the party's dramatic decline continued (it won just 22% in the Stockholm municipal election). The red-greens' belated focus on government reforms of various welfare services, and particularly on individual cases of heartless treatment, certainly seemed to stave off the electoral meltdown that threatened a week or so ago. But, as one participant pointed out at the seminar, it was essentially the tactics of an opposition, rather than of an aspiring government. Cross-class appeal was always the secret of the Social Democrats' political success, and, somehow, that's what they need to recover.

That result in full (as of Monday afternoon):

RED-GREENS

Left Party 5.6% (-0.3%)

Social Democrats 30.9% (-4.4%)

Greens 7.2% (+2.0%)

ALLIANCE

Centre Party 6.6% (-1.3%)

Liberals 7.1% (-0.4%)

Christian Democrats 5.6% (-1.0%)

Moderates 30.0% (+3.9%)

Sweden Democrats 5.7% (+2.8%)

Turnout 82.1% (+1.7%)

Source: Election Authority http://www.val.se/val/val2010/slutresultat/R/rike/index.html

We can also recommend could also recommend Jacob Christensen's insightful reflections which can be found here http://jacobchristensen.name/ and the Swedish Radio’s programme from Sunday evening http://sverigesradio.se/cgi-bin/international/nyhetssidor/sandningsarkiv.asp?date=19/09/2010&programID=2054 (available until 18 October 2010).

Malin & Lee

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor
Statsvetenskap Political Science
Karlstads universitet Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2 Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad 651 88 Karlstad
Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205 Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

2010-09-19

Annual Conference and Swedish elections

Dear Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group Subscriber,

 

1.      A date for your diary:

 

Political Studies Association - 61st Annual Conference

Transforming Politics: New Synergies

19-21 April 2011, London

Graduate Conference & Workshops 18 April 2011

 

We, the Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group, are planning to put proposals in for panel as well as a workshop at the conference. Please include a title of your proposed paper as this will provide us with an indication of subject areas and enable us to group research papers with similar ‘topics’. We have received a good response to the earlier email about the Annual Conference so this is just a reminder for those of you who have been thinking about participating but have yet to reply. We ask that you by return email show your interest in participating in a panel and/or a workshop on Scandinavian politics.

 

2.      Swedish elections:

 

Today, 19 September 2010, the elections to the Riksdag, County Council and Local Councils are taking place in Sweden. If you want to read more about this in the Swedish press (in Swedish), international press (in English) or follow the result of the election – voting starts tonight when the polling stations close you can do this on the following links:

 

Swedish media:

DN http://www.dn.se/nyheter/valet2010/

SvD http://www.svd.se/nyheter/politik/valet2010/

Sveriges Radio http://sverigesradio.se/sida/gruppsida.aspx?programid=3615&grupp=9635

SVT http://svt.se/val?lid=menu&lpos=3

 

Swedish Election Authority’s website http://www.val.se/in_english/index.html

 

International media:

BBC http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11360495

The New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2010/09/19/world/international-us-sweden-election.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss

France 24 http://www.france24.com/en/20100919-swedes-vote-tight-parliamentary-elections-far-right-sweden-democrats-reinfeldt

Reuters UK http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE68I0IP20100919

Irish Times http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2010/0918/1224279168129.html

ABC News International http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=11670290

Berlingske Tidene http://www.berlingske.dk/verden/kaos-truer-sverige-efter-valg

Politiken http://politiken.dk/udland/1063220/i-dag-skriver-sverige-historie/

Hufvudstadsbladet  http://www.hbl.fi/text/utrikes/2010/9/17/w51990.php

Aftenposten http://www.aftenposten.no/nyheter/uriks/article3817803.ece

 

 

Best wishes,

Malin & Lee

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

2010-09-13

Swedish election on Sunday: latest situation

With less than a week to go, the most interesting questions are not those that people were earlier expecting. For a start, the issue of whether the current four-party, centre-right coalition government would hold on to office is no longer the one that everyone's talking about. Unless the polls are drastically and systematically wrong, the coalition will retain power. Their lead over the left-of-centre parties has grown steadily over the last three weeks or so.

 

Instead, the main questions are: will the far-right Sweden Democrats get into parliament for the first time? and, if they do, will they then hold the balance of power? At the moment, it looks pretty likely that the Sweden Democrats will indeed get past the 4% threshold.

Previously, everyone assumed that, because the left and right blocs were so evenly matched, the Sweden Democrats would thus deprive both those blocs of a parliamentary majority - something of a nightmare scenario for all the mainstream parties. But such has been the decline of the left, the Social Democrats especially, that the government's current majority might even survive a breakthrough by an eighth party into parliament. The 35% that the Social Democrats achieved in 2006 was widely seen as a historic failure. Their performance in this election looks set to be a lot worse. Incredibly, they may not even end up as the biggest party.

 

What's gone wrong for the Social Democrats? Lots of things, of course.

But the one factor that pretty much all commentators agree on is the fateful decision in autumn 2007 to build a pre-electoral coalition with the Greens and the Left Party. Something similar has worked well in Norway; but it's been a different story in Sweden. One of the more entertaining features of this election campaign has been the Left Party's consistently and cheerfully emphasising the issues on which the allied left-of-centre parties are least agreed, and those on which the Left's preferences are least in tune with those of broader public opinion. (As the Social Democrats' support appears to have collapsed, and the Greens' has slipped back, the Left's own poll figures have held up pretty well.) A good deal of post-election recrimination is to on the cards.

 

Nick Aylott.

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

2010-08-05

A short notice on developments in Danish politics this summer

Here's a brief account of some entertaining controversies facing two party leaders in Denmark, written by Flemming Juul Christiansen of Aarhus University.

 

----------

A short notice on developments in Danish politics this summer. Two of the party leaders are in trouble:

 

First, there's the Social Democratic leader, Helle Thorning-Schmidt, who is married to Stephen Kinnock, son of the former Labour leader. He works in Switzerland. A month ago it turned out that he also paid his tax there, and that the couple had told the Danish tax authorities that he was in Denmark less than 33 weekends each year, which is what he has to be in order to comply with the rules. However, soon after, the couple stated that he would now pay tax in Denmark, and the case seemed to be over. Until last week, when it was revealed that a year ago, in order for Kinnock, as a foreign citizen, to own a house in Denmark, the couple had told the Danish Ministry of Justice that he was in Denmark all 52 weekends during a year, which was approved. Now, the problem is that the couple in writing has told two different public authorities things that cannot both be true at the same time, and which has financial gain as a possible motive. This could very well be illegal, and they risk a fine.

 

Thorning-Schmidt has issued a statement regretting their "carelessness", and that they are sending the Ministry of Justice precise information. She has otherwise remained silent in the case and so have the Social Democrats' allies, the Socialist People's Party and the Social Liberals. This is a sign of them sticking to her as their best card for winning the next election. There is no likely Social Democratic successor. From the government side, only party spokespeople, not ministers, have commented on the affair. Leading articles in today's newspapers are quite critical towards her, though, pointing to the legal side of the matter as a major blow to her credibility.

 

Second, there's the foreign minister and leader of the Conservative Party, Lene Espersen. Unlike her Swedish counterpart, Carl Bildt, Espersen did not participate in a recent EU summit. Ever since she failed to attend a meeting with, among others, Hillary Clinton over the Arctic back in the spring, her meeting activities have been scrutinised by the press.

 

She replaced her popular predecessor, Per Stig Møller, who is an icon for the left wing of the party, for no other reason than personal ambition; she stated that in public. Furthermore, she wanted to escape all the heavy burdens of legislation in the Ministry of Trade. Fairly predictably, this admission has created problems for her. Over the last 10 years, all Danish foreign ministers have missed this meeting in July. So, Conservative spokespeople speak about a witch hunt. She is trapped as foreign minister. She needs now to attend every possible meeting, and will thus have even less time at home as party leader, where she is criticised for having no vision. Furthermore, she can't abandon her post without losing too much authority as party leader.

 

As with the Social Democrats, however, there is no likely successor.

Connie Hedegaard, who would have had some support from the left wing of the party, has become European commissioner in Brussels.

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

2010-07-21

PSA 61st Annual Conference - Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group

Dear Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group Subscriber,

 

A date for your diary:

 

Political Studies Association - 61st Annual Conference

Transforming Politics: New Synergies

19-21 April 2011, London

Graduate Conference & Workshops 18 April 2011

 

We, the Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group, are planning to put proposals in for panel as well as a workshop at the conference. We ask that you by return email show your interest in participating in a panel and/or a workshop on Scandinavian politics. Please include a title of your proposed paper as this will provide us with an indication of subject areas and enable us to group research papers with similar ‘topics’.

 

Best summer wishes,

Malin & Lee

_ _ _

Below is other information from the Political Studies Association which is of interest to us.

 

PSA 'EXCHANGER' SCHEME HONG KONG

 

There is an opportunity for one or two PSA members to present their work at the annual conference of the Hong Kong PSA this year. The meeting is 26-27 August 2010 at Hong Kong Baptist University in Kowloon Tong. Those chosen receive free registration (as do those PSA members attending but not on the 'exchanger' basis), hotel accommodation nearby and some local hospitality, as a well as a guaranteed place on the programme. PSA UK has a special grant scheme to support co-funded applications covering airfare. Anyone interested should email a paper title, brief abstract, and one-page CV to Professor Terrell Carver, PSA's International Relations Sub-committee Chair (tfcarver @ earthlink.net) as soon as possible. PSA News records the experiences of last year's 'exchanger' Dibyesh Anand in vol. 20, no. 4, p. 23, available on-line at  htttp://www.psa.ac.uk.

 

Professor Terrell Carver

University of Bristol

_ _ _

 

PERSONAL WEBPAGE ON THE PSA WEBSITE

 

Dear PSA member,

As part of the Association’s 60th Anniversary activities, we have extended the Members’ Area on our main web site to include a facility for all members to create and maintain their own personal web page. The key features of the launch version of this facility are:

  • Each page has a “latest news” section which feeds automatically into the new Members’ News panel on the Members’ Area home page.
  • In addition there are sections for your curriculum vitae and for publications.
  • All entries are searchable in the site search available to members, but not in the open access version.
  • Access is restricted to Association members only. In the first instance, none of the facilities is available on open access. Later in the year this policy will be reviewed and members will be consulted on the option to change this restriction, as well as adding further faculties.

 

There is an introductory page and guide to users here. If you have queries, problems, or suggestions, please let me know by email using webmaster @ psa.ac.uk (Please do NOT reply to the List Server email at members @ psa.ac.uk. This will not reach me.)

With best wishes

Richard Topf

(Electronic Publications Editor)

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

2010-04-13

"Nordic and Baltic Economies: Problems and Prospects" Seminar

On behalf of Mary Hilson apologies for any cross-posting.

 

The UCL Nordic/Baltic Research Group is pleased to announce a forthcoming seminar on "Nordic and Baltic Economies: Problems and Prospects", to take place at UCL on 29th April 2010.  The seminar is the second in the ESRC-funded series "The Nordic and Baltic States in the European Political Imagination".

 

In the current global economic turmoil, some of the Nordic and Baltic economies – such as Latvia and Iceland – have suffered badly while others – Norway, in particular – have survived the downturn relatively well. Over the last few years, the economic performance of Europe’s regions has grown in importance to practitioners and academics alike. The speakers at the seminar will be discussing issues related to economic development and future growth potential in the region ranging from financial recovery and tax reforms to labour market policies and innovation.

 

For further information including the full programme please follow this

link: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/silva/nordicbaltic/NBEconomies.  There will be a charge of £10, payable on the day.  To register please contact Allan Sikk (a.sikk@ssees.ucl.ac.uk).

 

All welcome!

 

Mary Hilson (on behalf of the Nordic/Baltic Research Group)

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

Dear Scandinavian Specialist Group Member,

 

Please find attached the documents, links and instructions for the AGM taking place this Friday 16 April 2010, 11am Swedish time.

 

Practicalities first, on Friday  you need to log onto in order to join the meeting:
https://connect.sunet.se/psaspsg/
If you have never attended a Connect Pro meeting before:
Test your connection:
https://connect.sunet.se/common/help/en/support/meeting_test.htm
Get a quick overview:
http://www.adobe.com/go/connectpro_overview

 

Please find test your connection prior to the meeting as sometime one has to install plug-ins for the programme to work correctly.

 

This is a programme which enables us to talk to each other using web cameras (do not worry if you do not have one we can still hear you and talk with you). It would be good if you have earphones/headset and do not use the speakers on the computer as the microphone will pick this sound up and we will hear an echo.

 

The documents attached are an agenda for the meeting and a copy of the report for 2009 (based on the form which is to be returned to the PSA).

A link is provided to an amended draft for a constitution for the Specialist Group which will be discussed and adopted at the AGM https://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AfIcIEu7mjItZGR4MnIyOGZfMzYxc3J6cDU1Zno&hl=en_GB

 

We are very much looking forward to seeing in virtually on Friday,

Malin, Lee & Nick

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

 

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