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Search: swepub > Umeå University > (2000-2004) > Social Sciences

  • Result 1-10 of 981
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1.
  • Moore, Jason W., 1971- (author)
  • Environmental crises and the metabolic rift in world-historical perspective
  • 2000
  • In: Organization & environment. - 1086-0266 .- 1552-7417. ; 13:2, s. 123-157
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This article proposes a new theoretical framework to study the dialectic of capital and nature over the longue durée of world capitalism. The author proposes that today’s global ecological crisis has its roots in the transition to capitalism during the long sixteenth century. The emergence of capitalism marked not only a decisive shift in the arenas of politics, economy, and society, but a fundamental reorganization of world ecology, characterized by a “metabolic rift,” a progressively deepening rupture in the nutrient cycling between the country and the city. Building upon the historical political economy of Marx, Foster, Arrighi, and Wallerstein, the author proposes a new research agenda organized around the concept of systemic cycles of agro-ecological transformation. This agenda aims at discerning the ways in which capitalism’s relationship to nature developed discontinuously over time as recurrent ecological crises have formed a decisive moment of world capitalist crisis, forcing successive waves of restructuring over long historical time.
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2.
  • Moore, Jason W., 1971- (author)
  • Nature and the transition from feudalism to capitalism
  • 2003
  • In: Review: A Journal of the Fernand Braudel Center. - 0147-9032. ; 26:2, s. 97-172
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • An epochal transformation of nature-society relations was inscribed in the transition from feudalism to capitalism. This article advances three central propositions. First, the origins of today’s global ecological crisis are found in the emergence of the capitalist world-economy in the “long” sixteenth century - not in industrialization, population growth, or market expansion, as the conventional wisdom would have it. Secondly, the crisis of feudalism was a general crisis not only of medieval Europe’s political economy, but in equal measure an expression of feudalism’s underlying ecological contradictions. Thirdly, the rise of capitalism effected a radical recomposition of world ecology. As early as the sixteenth century, we can see how the emergent logic of capital, which at once implies endless expansion and seeks to flatten socio-ecological diversity, undermined the possibilities for a sustainable relation between nature and society. Capitalism thus differed radically from feudalism and all other precapitalist formations. Where earlier ecological crises had been local, capitalism globalized them. From this standpoint, the origins of capitalism may shed light on today’s ecological crises.
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4.
  • Nordenmark, Mikael (author)
  • Balancing work and family demands : Do increasing demands increase stress?
  • 2004
  • In: Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. - : SAGE Publications. - 1403-4948 .- 1651-1905. ; 32:6, s. 450-455
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Aims: The aim of this study is to analyse how increasing demands from work and family life affect the level of strain and whether there are any significant gender differences in this respect. This is be done by testing the following hypotheses: An increase in work and family demands causes (a) an increased risk of suffering from fatigue; (b) an increased need for working fewer hours. Methods: The hypotheses are analysed by using a longitudinal data set consisting of nearly 9,000 Swedish individuals. Results: Multiple demands increase the risk of suffering from fatigue among both women and men, but it is only among women that an increase in the percentage desiring a reduction in their working hours can be found. Conclusions: The results support the role stress theory, especially among women.
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5.
  • Nordenmark, Mikael, et al. (author)
  • Fair or unfair? : Perceived Fairness of Household Division of Labour and Gender Equality among Women and Men: The Swedish case
  • 2003
  • In: European Journal of Women's Studies. - London : SAGE Publications. - 1350-5068 .- 1461-7420. ; 10:2, s. 181-209
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The main aim of this study is to analyse how time use, individual resources, distributive justice and gender ideology influence perceptions of fairness concerning housework and gender equality. The analyses are based on survey data as well as on an interview study, both including Swedish couples. The quantitative results show that it is only factors connected to time use (division of housework and leisure time) that are significantly correlated to both perceptions of fairness concerning division of household labour and gender equality. Although the qualitative results in part confirm this picture, they also illustrate the complexity of concepts like fairness and equality. The interviews show that there are several factors and mechanisms at work in influencing perceptions of fairness and equality that were not possible to see from the quantitative analysis alone.
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6.
  • Landström, Inger, 1954- (author)
  • Mellan samtid och tradition : folkhögskolans identitet i kursutbudets yrkesinriktning
  • 2004
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In this thesis the vocational orientation of the courses offered - as an expression of the folk high school's self-identity- is analysed. The point of departure was that what the folk high school do, is a way to show what it wants to be and, therefore, reflects what it is. Focus is on how the folk high school meets with contemporary tasks and demands in different areas of society. The research objects are, the folk high school as type of school (a total of 147 schools) and a sample of ten individual schools with different ownership. The study is about what the offered courses reveal about the folk high school's reflections and conclusions as regards its future activities in relation to its history and contemporary society.The theoretical framework of the thesis is built on the sociologist Anthony Giddens 'Theory of Structuration' and the concepts of structure and agency. Reflections about the surrounding world and the contributions the schools' want to make in society is assumed to result in a more or less conscious strategy for the future, the folk high school's course politics as it is expressed in action. The identity has been interpreted in vocational roles as they appear in course contents. The word 'vocation' is used in almost the same sense as Giddens defines 'work'.Self-identity was analysed from three different kinds of texts and with one question for each. In the first perspective focus is on official investigations and political decisions, in the period 1970-2000. What role in society is imposed upon the folk high school in contemporary educational policies? In the second perspective all courses offered at all folk high schools in 1972 and 2000 are studied, in order to present a picture of the overall pattern of vocational orientation. In the third perspective the course politics of the ten selected folk high schools are investigated, from the start of the respective schools, and in relation to what each school thinks it 'is'- with different owners and in its particular geographical situation.One overriding conclusion is that the characteristics that make the identity of the folk high school seem unclear and paradoxical are the very same that constitute the self-identity of the folk high school as being complex and multifaceted. The self-identity seems paradoxical when the vocational orientation presents itself as both preserving traditions and answering to today's needs. In other words, the school 'does what it has always done' (is conservative) and at the same time 'captures new needs and tasks' (is flexible).The folk high school's role and uniqueness in what they actually do can be understood as what I have called 'contemporaneous civic functionaries'. Their profiles emerge when flexibility is based on history. I want to designate 'existential rationality' to the motivating mechanism that seems to at the same time force changes and lean on own experiences. Expressing contemporary self-identity is grounded in the individual tradition as motivationbased values, cultural and geographic conditions.
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7.
  • Bergman, Mats, et al. (author)
  • The relative importance of actual and potential competition: Empirical evidence from the pharmaceuticals market
  • 2003
  • In: Journal of industrial economics. - : Wiley. - 0022-1821 .- 1467-6451. ; 51, s. 455-467
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We study actual and potential competition and other factors that determine price paths of brand-name drugs in the Swedish pharmaceuticals market. The results indicate that the price of the incumbent product is lowered by potential competition, entry of (additional) generics, and the introduction of a so-called reference-price system. We also identify a 'ratchet' effect, through which price regulation makes entry-deterring limit-pricing credible.
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8.
  • Nordenmark, Mikael (author)
  • Multiple social roles and well-being : a longitudinal test of the role stress theory and the role expansion theory
  • 2004
  • In: Acta Sociologica. - : SAGE Publications. - 0001-6993 .- 1502-3869. ; 47:2, s. 115-126
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In general, Western societies believe that people should engage in a multitude of social activities and develop multiple social roles. The assumption is that having multiple roles is beneficial to the individual. However, it also means that life is more complex and that people have to handle sometimes conflicting demands. Earlier research on the effects of multiple roles on individual well-being has not provided a clear picture, some results supporting the role stress theory and some the role expansion theory. This article tests empirically the relevance of the role stress theory and the role expansion theory by analysing whether having multiple social roles in general decreases or increases individual well-being. The results are based on a panel study of nearly 9000 randomly selected Swedes. The conclusion is that both number of social roles and any increase in social roles are negatively correlated with the risk of suffering from insomnia and a lingering illness, and the risk of being on regular medication for a lingering illness. These findings indicate that having multiple social roles increases individual well-being; the results therefore support the role expansion theory.
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9.
  • Sjöberg, Rickard L, et al. (author)
  • Gender biases in decisions on euthanasia among Swedish jurors
  • 2003
  • In: Nordic Journal of Psychiatry. - : Informa UK Limited. - 0803-9488 .- 1502-4725. ; 57:6, s. 469-471
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The present study set out to investigate whether group- based biases may influence decisions regarding euthanasia in Swedish jurors ( namndeman). Thirty- eight Swedish jurors were presented with a case description of euthanasia in a severely brain- damaged patient. Age and gender of the patient were systematically varied. The jurors were asked to what extent they believed that euthanasia was ethical in the case presented to them and whether they thought that it should be legal. Jurors tended to be supportive of euthanasia and were more so when it was used on patients who belonged to the opposite gender. These results suggest that group- based biases may influence decisions regarding euthanasia in Swedish jurors. The finding has implication for the Swedish debate regarding a possible legalization of such procedures.
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  • Result 1-10 of 981
Type of publication
journal article (317)
book chapter (185)
reports (137)
doctoral thesis (136)
conference paper (107)
book (41)
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editorial collection (18)
review (16)
licentiate thesis (13)
other publication (5)
editorial proceedings (4)
research review (2)
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Type of content
other academic/artistic (560)
peer-reviewed (363)
pop. science, debate, etc. (58)
Author/Editor
Puu, Tönu, 1936- (28)
Silver, Lars (18)
Lundahl, Lisbeth (15)
Bergman, Torbjörn (13)
Nyroos, Mikaela, 197 ... (13)
Bergman, Mats (13)
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Burman, Monica (12)
Gardini, Laura (11)
Lundahl, Lisbeth, 19 ... (11)
Westin, Lars, Profes ... (11)
Juslin, Peter (11)
Berggren, Björn (10)
Rönnberg, Linda, 197 ... (10)
Wiberg, Britt (10)
Sporre, Karin (10)
Lundberg, Johan, 196 ... (9)
Wilson, Timothy, 193 ... (9)
Aronsson, Thomas, 19 ... (9)
Brännäs, Kurt (9)
Bergman, Mats, 1964- (9)
Westin, Kerstin, 195 ... (8)
Bostedt, Göran, 1966 ... (8)
Strøm, Kaare (8)
Lindmark, Magnus, 19 ... (7)
Lindmark, Magnus (7)
Westin, Lars, 1953- (7)
Westerlund, Olle (7)
Carbin, Maria, 1972- (7)
Müller, Wolfgang C. (7)
Lithner, Johan, 1960 ... (7)
Malmberg, Gunnar, 19 ... (7)
Lidström, Anders, 19 ... (6)
Börstler, Jürgen (6)
Ågren, Karin (6)
Alexiadou, Nafsika, ... (6)
Andersson-Skog, Lena ... (6)
Boström, Gert-Olof, ... (6)
Lundberg, Sofia, 196 ... (6)
Lanot, Gauthier, 196 ... (6)
Nygren, Lennart (6)
Lindgren, Ulla, 1943 ... (5)
Lindgren, Urban (5)
Johansson, Stina, 19 ... (5)
Garvill, Jörgen, 194 ... (5)
Olofsson, Christer (5)
Johanson, Martin (5)
Gunnarsson, Åsa (5)
Armelius, Bengt-Åke, ... (5)
Backlund, Kenneth, 1 ... (5)
Lithner, Johan (5)
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University
Uppsala University (46)
Södertörn University (33)
Mid Sweden University (25)
Högskolan Dalarna (21)
Luleå University of Technology (15)
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University of Gothenburg (10)
Linköping University (9)
Karolinska Institutet (8)
Royal Institute of Technology (7)
Stockholm University (7)
Lund University (7)
Blekinge Institute of Technology (6)
Linnaeus University (4)
Mälardalen University (3)
Jönköping University (3)
Karlstad University (3)
Örebro University (2)
Malmö University (2)
Halmstad University (1)
University of Gävle (1)
Chalmers University of Technology (1)
University of Borås (1)
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Language
English (557)
Swedish (413)
German (4)
French (4)
Norwegian (2)
Finnish (1)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Humanities (82)
Natural sciences (23)
Medical and Health Sciences (19)
Engineering and Technology (6)
Agricultural Sciences (3)

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