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11.
  • Edvinsson, Sören, et al. (author)
  • Do unequal societies cause death among the elderly? : a study of the health effects of inequality in Swedish municipalities, 2006
  • 2013
  • In: Global Health Action. - : Taylor & Francis. - 1654-9716 .- 1654-9880. ; 6:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: A lively public and academic debate has highlighted the potential health risk of living in regions and nations characterized by inequality. However, previous research provides an ambiguous picture, with positive association mainly having been found on higher geographical levels. One explanation for this could be that the effect of living in more heterogeneous social settings differs between levels of aggregation. Methods: We examine the association between income inequality (using the Gini coefficient) and all-cause mortality in Swedish municipalities in the age group 65-74. A multi-level analysis is applied and we control for e.g. individual income and average income level in the unicipality. The analyses are based on individual register data on all residents born between 1932 and 1941, and outcomes are measured for the year 2006.Results: Lower individual income as well as lower average income level in the municipality of residence increased mortality significantly. We found an association between income inequality and mortality with excessive deaths in unequal municipalities even after controlling for mean income level and personal income. The results from the analysis of individual data differed substantially from analyses using aggregate data.Conclusions: Income inequality has a significant association with mortality in the age groups 65 to 75 at municipality level. The association is small compared to many other variables, but it is not negligible. Even in a comparatively equal society like Sweden, we need to consider possible effects of income inequality on mortality at the local level. 
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12.
  • Edvinsson, Sören, 1953-, et al. (author)
  • Do unequal societies cause death and disease? : A study of the health effects on elderly of inequality in Swedish municipalities, 2006
  • 2011
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • A lively public and academic debate has highlighted the potential health risk of living in regions and nations characterized by inequality (Wilkinson and Pickett 2007; 2009). It is argued that inequality may add to increasing health differentials over the life course. However, previous research provides so far an ambiguous picture. One explanation could be that the effect of living in more heterogeneous social settings may differ between levels of aggregation. A hypothesis is that homogeneity is positive on the national or regional level, while on a lower level of aggregation living in homogeneous settings could be detrimental for health, at least in poor neighborhoods. In this paper we present the preliminary results of our examination on how residence in unequal versus homogeneous areas is associated with health outcome of elderly people in Sweden. These first results are based on municipality level data on individuals born between 1932 and 1941 and the outcome is measured for the year 2006. Furthermore, we analyze the effect on health of income inequality (measured by Gini-coefficient) as compared to the effect of individual income and the average income level in the area. We analysed the associations both with individual-level and multi-level analysis. Our main finding is that inequality has an independent effect on mortality in the way that unequal municipalities have excessive deaths even after controlling for mean income level and personal income. This result was found not only in the individual-level analysis but also in the multilevel analysis.
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13.
  • Edvinsson, Sören, 1953-, et al. (author)
  • Income inequality in Swedish municipalities 1986-2013 : Development and regional patterns
  • 2021
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In the present report, we investigate the patterns and trends of inequality in disposable income in the working-age population in Swedish municipalities 1986-2013. This period coincided with when Sweden changed from very lowlevels of inequality to one with substantially increasing inequality. Incomes has increased in all parts of Sweden, but differences in incomes between municipalities have widened. Asa result, large parts of Sweden have become poorer in a relative, although not in a nominative sense. At the same time, income inequality has increased substantially within as well as between municipalities. Present-day Swedes live in much more unequal environments, both at the national level and in the municipalities. The large city areas, or at least part of them, have had a much more advantageous economic development, but they also became more unequal. We see a division between parts of Sweden; there are clear differentiation tendencies between urban and rural parts, centre and periphery. Another finding is that the relation between mean income and income inequality has changed from the 1980s to the present. This association was negative a couple of decades ago, meaning that inequality was somewhat higher in poorer municipalities. From the 1990s onwards, the association is instead positive – affluent municipalities are more unequal.
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14.
  • Edvinsson, Sören, 1953-, et al. (author)
  • Neighbourhood inequality as a health risk : Empirical evidence from Swedish registers
  • 2013
  • Conference paper (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In this paper, we explore the impact on mortality of income inequality in residential neighbourhoods and municipalities among elderly 65-84 years in the year 2004, using Swedish longitudinal micro-data covering the entire Swedish population for the period 1970 – 2006. Preliminary cross-sectional multi-level analyses are now complemented by longitudinal analyses of long-term residential histories with exposure to equal/unequal municipalities and neighbourhoods and the long-term impact on mortality. We investigate the association between mortality and income inequality at place of residence at different time lags and the effect of a summary measure of previous exposures to environments characterised by different inequality levels. We also compare groups that have different experiences of residential characteristics, i.e. those that have resided in unequal or equal places and those that have changed from equal to unequal residences or vice versa. Preliminary results from a cross-sectional analysis on 2006, show that income inequality in the municipality of residence had an independent effect on mortality in the age group 65-74 years
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15.
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16.
  • Eriksson, Madeleine, 1978- (author)
  • (Re)producing a periphery : popular representations of the Swedish North
  • 2010
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The discourse on Norrland (literally ‘North land’ in English) as essentially ‘different’ has been(re)produced in literature, politics and science for as long as the idea of ‘Norrland’ has existed. Thus,when investigating the discourse that constructs the identity of Norrland in opposition to a Swedishnational identity, it is important to connect these representations to their contemporary (andchanging) political-economic contexts. The aim of this thesis is to analyze contemporaryrepresentations in news, film, advertising and interviews to show how representations constructstereotypes informed by neoliberal ideals and internationally familiar stereotypes of a traditionalintransigent population positioned in Norrland and a modern and progressive population in theurban South. The findings in this thesis can be summarized as follows. First, Norrland has beenconsistently reproduced, resisted and reworked through various discursive networks and practicesover centuries, as simultaneously authentic and obsolete. Drawing on these discourses makes therepresentations of Norrland in the news become part of a wider discursive network that representsNorrland as an ‘internal other’ within Sweden. Secondly, discourses on Swedish modernity and onneoliberal growth and competition reproduce Norrland and its people as inferior to the rest ofSweden. These representations are reworked and resisted and result in ‘real’ material effects in, forinstance, the news media, place marketing and film. Thirdly, in order to resist these representationsand become part of the ‘modern’, progressive world, places and people need to adjust to neoliberalideals of competitiveness and growth. And, finally, people’s identities are affected by theseneoliberal ideals as they have to relate and react to the representations of different places andpeople and the discourse on the urban as progress. This results in different strategies in theconstruction of narrative identities. I conclude by arguing that these representations serve not onlyas contrasts but also as strategies in the quest to scapegoat certain groups for problems that initiallyoriginated in unequal opportunities and structures of power related to, for instance, ethnicity, class,gender and disabilities – something that is exacerbated by neoliberalist policies and ideologies. Themore pressure is put on individuals and places to produce constant growth, the more certain peopleand places are viewed as ‘unproductive’ and problematic. The problems of depopulation anddiminishing job opportunities in the inland areas of Norrland are thus blamed on the population through the representations of Norrland as an internal ‘other.’
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17.
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18.
  • Eriksson, Rikard, 1979-, et al. (author)
  • Agglomeration mobility: Effects of localisation, urbanisation, and scale on job changes
  • 2008
  • In: Environment and planning A. - : Pion. - 0308-518X .- 1472-3409. ; 40, s. 2419-2434
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Following increased attention being paid to the importance of labour-market processes in relation to knowledge diffusion and learning, this study addresses the influence of agglomeration economies (localisation, urbanisation, and scale) on the propensity to change jobs between and within local labour markets. From the use of longitudinal individual data (1990 ^ 2002), controlling for factors such as age, sex, income, and social relations, the results show that the composition of regional economies influences labour-market dynamism. We identify two cases of intraregional agglomeration mobility, that is, positive effects on job mobility, due to the concentration of similar activities (localisation economies) and the size of the labour market (urbanisation economies). The results also show that localisation economies compensate for regional structural disadvantages connected to small population numbers, as localisation effects in small regions have a significantlypositive effect on intraregional job-mobility rates, even compared with localisation effects in large and diversified metropolitan areas. The results indicate that the concentration of similar activities may be useful for small regions, if high levels of job mobility are crucial for the transfer of knowledge and the performance of firms.
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19.
  • Eriksson, Rikard, 1979- (author)
  • Labour mobility and plant performance : The influence of proximity, relatedness and agglomeration
  • 2009
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The purpose of this thesis is to shed new light on the theorizations discussing the economic benefits of geographical clustering in a space economy increasingly characterized by globalization processes. This is made possible through the employment of a plant-perspective and a focus on how the relative fixity and mobility of labour influence plant performance throughout the entire Swedish economy.  By means of the longitudinal micro database ASTRID, connecting attributes of individuals to features of plants and localities for the whole Swedish economy, the empirical findings indicate that both localization and urbanization economies produce significant labour market externalities and that such inter-plant linkages positively affect plant performance as compared to the partial effects of relative regional specialization and diversification. Moreover, it is also demonstrated that it is necessary both to distinguish how well the external skills retrieved via labour mobility match the existing knowledge base of plants and to determine the geographical dimension of such flows to verify the relative effect of labour market-induced externalities. Finally, it is demonstrated that whereas general urbanization is beneficial within close distance to the plant, the composition of economic activities is more influential at greater distances. In such cases the geographical dimension influences whether plants benefit from being located in similar or different local settings.  In conclusion, it is argued that the circulation of labour skills, created and reproduced through the place-specific industrial setup, is crucial for understanding the mechanisms creating geographical variations in plant performance as compared to other regional conditions often proxied as relative specialization or diversification. This is because the relative fixity of labour tends to create place- and sector-specific skills which by means of their mobility in space are likely to facilitate the recombination of local skills, make the acquirement of non-local skills possible and secure sufficient affinity between economic actors by strengthening other dimensions of proximity – all aspects regarded as crucial to facilitate interactive learning processes and contribute to sustained regional growth.
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  • Result 11-20 of 104
Type of publication
journal article (62)
doctoral thesis (15)
book chapter (10)
reports (9)
conference paper (3)
book (2)
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other publication (2)
licentiate thesis (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (66)
other academic/artistic (36)
pop. science, debate, etc. (2)
Author/Editor
Malmberg, Gunnar, 19 ... (48)
Malmberg, Gunnar (14)
Malmberg, Gunnar, Pr ... (12)
Westin, Kerstin, 195 ... (9)
Malmberg, Per, 1974 (5)
Ng, Nawi (5)
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Garvill, Jörgen, 194 ... (5)
Ng, Nawi, 1974 (5)
Eriksson, Malin, 196 ... (4)
Lindgren, Urban, 196 ... (4)
Edvinsson, Sören, 19 ... (4)
de Luna, Xavier, Pro ... (4)
Clark, Eric (3)
Malmberg, Bo (3)
Holm, Einar, 1942- (3)
Norberg, Margareta (3)
Andersson, Gunnar (3)
Hansson, Gunnar C., ... (3)
Håkansson, Johan (3)
Brandén, Maria (3)
Oquist, Gunnar, 1941 ... (3)
Broström, Göran (2)
Borgegård, Lars-Erik (2)
Eriksson, Rikard, 19 ... (2)
Lindgren, Urban, Pro ... (2)
Eriksson, Madeleine, ... (2)
Osmancevic, Amra, 19 ... (2)
Johansson, Lars-Gunn ... (2)
Kolk, Martin (2)
Nilsson, Gunnar (2)
Dahlén, Gunnar, 1944 (2)
Rostila, Mikael (2)
Svensson, Jan-Erik, ... (2)
Padyab, Mojgan (2)
Drefahl, Sven (2)
Loman, Niklas (2)
Lundholm, Emma (2)
Aradhya, Siddartha (2)
Mussino, Eleonora (2)
Wigertz, Ove, 1934- (2)
Åhlfeldt, Hans, 1955 ... (2)
Mulder, Clara H. (2)
Olofsson, Jenny (2)
Stattin, Mikael, 195 ... (2)
Gardeström, Per, 195 ... (2)
Fors Connolly, Filip ... (2)
Öquist, Gunnar, 1941 ... (2)
Walz, Thomas (2)
Cederström, Agneta (2)
Hjort, Susanne, 1970 ... (2)
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University
Umeå University (78)
University of Gothenburg (15)
Linköping University (8)
Uppsala University (7)
Chalmers University of Technology (6)
Karolinska Institutet (6)
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Stockholm University (4)
Lund University (4)
Malmö University (2)
Högskolan Dalarna (2)
Kristianstad University College (1)
Royal Institute of Technology (1)
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Language
English (92)
Swedish (12)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Social Sciences (55)
Medical and Health Sciences (27)
Natural sciences (3)
Engineering and Technology (3)
Humanities (1)

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