First Published: 01 February 2006From the 1930s to the 1980s, Swedish politics was based on the assumption that social change could be accomplished through a specific political and administrative process. National politicians decided the aims of policy, government commissions of inquiry engaged experts who compiled available knowledge, Parliament turned the resulting proposal into law, a civil service agency implemented the policy and local authorities put it into effect. This rationalistic model of social steering can be called `the strong state'. This article documents the fall of the strong state. It also argues that these changes to the output side of government have troubling im-plications for the operation of democracy. The reason is ...
There have been extensive discussions in academic circles of why some countries develop into welfare...
This paper uses the Swedish welfare system as a case study to investigate the nature of policymaking...
When reforming their own countries, several observers, ideologues and politicians in former socialis...
The welfare state in Sweden was established more than a century ago by the Social Democratic Party o...
In 1976 Sweden adopted a law on workplace democracy, presented by the Social Democratic government a...
Sweden, a small but affluent society, is the epitome of the modern welfare state. Through the effort...
The Swedish welfare state is regularly praised (or maligned) as the prototype of publicly organized ...
Since the post-war era, the Swedish Social Democratic Party (Socialdemokratiska arbetarepartiet, or ...
As discussed by Nistotskaya and D'Arcy in Chapter 2 on Sweden, a long tradition of generally high-qu...
In the paper, attempt was made to verify the not uncommon opinion about the collapse of the Swedish ...
The present article summarizes arguments, but also historical and statistical data supporting the fo...
Stefan Svallfors takes Sweden as an example of how politics as organized combat has changed quite dr...
The Swedish welfare state model has its roots in home turf as well as in the soil of othernations, m...
Is Sweden a failed state in the making or a paradise on earth? Neither. Sweden is a functioning demo...
This paper discusses a number of questions with regard to Sweden’s economic and political developmen...
There have been extensive discussions in academic circles of why some countries develop into welfare...
This paper uses the Swedish welfare system as a case study to investigate the nature of policymaking...
When reforming their own countries, several observers, ideologues and politicians in former socialis...
The welfare state in Sweden was established more than a century ago by the Social Democratic Party o...
In 1976 Sweden adopted a law on workplace democracy, presented by the Social Democratic government a...
Sweden, a small but affluent society, is the epitome of the modern welfare state. Through the effort...
The Swedish welfare state is regularly praised (or maligned) as the prototype of publicly organized ...
Since the post-war era, the Swedish Social Democratic Party (Socialdemokratiska arbetarepartiet, or ...
As discussed by Nistotskaya and D'Arcy in Chapter 2 on Sweden, a long tradition of generally high-qu...
In the paper, attempt was made to verify the not uncommon opinion about the collapse of the Swedish ...
The present article summarizes arguments, but also historical and statistical data supporting the fo...
Stefan Svallfors takes Sweden as an example of how politics as organized combat has changed quite dr...
The Swedish welfare state model has its roots in home turf as well as in the soil of othernations, m...
Is Sweden a failed state in the making or a paradise on earth? Neither. Sweden is a functioning demo...
This paper discusses a number of questions with regard to Sweden’s economic and political developmen...
There have been extensive discussions in academic circles of why some countries develop into welfare...
This paper uses the Swedish welfare system as a case study to investigate the nature of policymaking...
When reforming their own countries, several observers, ideologues and politicians in former socialis...