Neoliberalism in the Nordics

Developing an Absent Theme

  • Funder: Riksbankens jubileumsfond

Programme Description

The research programme “Neoliberalism in the Nordics: developing an absent theme” intends to develop an understanding of neoliberalism in the Nordic welfare states, and specifically, of the role of the welfare state and a set of political alliances surrounding and including social democracy, not merely as the targets of neoliberal critique but as the vehicles of a specific Nordic variant of neoliberalism. There are good reasons to hypothesize that key intellectual, political and economic developments in the Nordics since the 1970s share characteristics of neoliberalisation elsewhere – while at the same time displaying distinct features.

The programme aims to develop a new research theme around the expressions of neoliberalism in the Northern European periphery, by building a strong team of intellectual, conceptual, political, economic, social and cultural historians working across Sweden, Denmark, and Finland. It has two specific aims: first, to re-examine key economic social and political changes in the Nordic countries and explain why and how neoliberalism happened in political cultures and welfare statist societies that, according to the dominant literature in social science, should not have been conducive to it. Second, to bring the particular experiences of the Nordics to the larger field of neoliberalism research globally, by re-examining the role of Nordic progressive cultures as distinct carriers of a ‘local’ variant of neoliberalism.

The programme leader is Jenny Andersson, Department of Science and History of Ideas, Uppsala University, and it incorporates researchers from 8 Nordic universities for a period of six years.

About the Project

Programme Duration

2020–2026

Funding

The Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences

Researchers

  • Jenny Andersson, CNRS and Department of History of Science and Ideas, Uppsala University, Sweden
  • Orsi Husz, Department of Economic History, Uppsala University, Sweden
  • Nikolas Glover, Department of Economic History, Uppsala University, Sweden
  • Carl Marklund, Institute of Contemporary History, Södertörn University, Sweden
  • Johan Strang, Centre for Nordic Studies, Helsinki University, Finland
  • Ilkka Kärrylä, Centre for Nordic Studies, Helsinki University, Finland
  • Jeppe Nevers, Department of History, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
  • Klaus Petersen, Department of History, Welfare Studies and Public Policy, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
  • Niklas Olsen, Center for Global History, Copenhagen University, Denmark
  • Chris Howell, Oberlin College, USA
  • Erik Bengtsson, Department of Economic History, Lund University, Sweden
  • David Larsson Heidenblad, Department of History, Lund University, Sweden

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