Syllabus/achievement requirements

* = the article is in a compendium

@ = the article is available online

How to find an article on the reading list

1. Theories of globalization (Plamen Akaliyski)

@Guillen, M. F. (2001). "Is globalization civilizing, destructive or feeble? A critique of five key debates in the social science literature." Annual Review of Sociology 27: 235-260. (25 pages)

*Robinson, W. I. (2007) Theories of Globalization, in The Blackwell Companion to Globalization (ed G. Ritzer), Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Oxford, UK. (19 pages)

@Holton, R. (2000). "Globalization's cultural consequences." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 570: 140-152. (12 pages)

2. Religion and culture: the clash of civilizations? (Plamen Akaliyski)

@Huntington, S. P. (1993). "The clash of civilizations." Foreign Affairs 72(3): 22-49. (27 pages)

@Inglehart, R., & Baker, W. E. (2000). Modernization, cultural change, and the persistence of traditional values. American Sociological Review, 65(1), 19-51. doi: 10.2307/2657288 (34 pages)

@Norris, P. and R. Inglehart (2002). "Islamic culture and democracy: Testing the 'clash of civilizations' thesis." Comparative Sociology 1(3-4): 235-263. (28 pages)

3. Culture, migration and acculturation (Plamen Akaliyski)

@Berry, J. W. (2008). "Globalisation and acculturation." International Journal of Intercultural Relations 32(4): 328-336. (9 pages)

@Belot, M. and S. Ederveen (2012). "Cultural barriers in migration between OECD countries." Journal of Population Economics 25(3): 1077-1105. (29 pages)

@Leong, C. H. and C. Ward (2006). "Cultural values and attitudes toward immigrants and multiculturalism: The case of the Eurobarometer survey on racism and xenophobia." International Journal of Intercultural Relations 30(6): 799-810. (12 pages)

@Gungor, D., et al. (2012). "Religiosity, values, and acculturation: A study of Turkish, Turkish-Belgian, and Belgian adolescents." International Journal of Behavioral Development 36(5): 367-373. (7 pages)

@Gungor, D. (2007). "The interplay between values, acculturation and adaptation: A study on Turkish-Belgian adolescents." International Journal of Psychology 42(6): 380-392.

4: Incorporating the global: mobile, cosmopolitan and transnational turns (Mette Andersson)

@Urry, J. (2010): ‘Mobile sociology’, The British Journal of Sociology Vol. 61: 347-366.

@Beck, U. & Sznaider. N. (2010): ‘Unpacking cosmopolitanism for the social sciences: a research agenda’, The British Journal of Sociology Vol. 61: 381-403.

@Levitt, P. & Jaworsky, N. (2007): ‘Transnational migration studies: Past Developments and Future Trends’, Annual Review of Sociology 2007, 33:129-156.

5. Contesting national belonging through activism and sport (Mette Andersson)

@Calhoun, C. (2003) ‘Belonging’ in the cosmopolitan imaginary. Ethnicities 3(4): 531-553, 23 pages

@Andersson, M. (2007) ‘The Relevance of the Black Atlantic in contemporary sport. Racial imaginaries in Norway’, International Review for the Sociology of Sport 42(1): 65-81.

@Jacobsen, C. & M. Andersson (2012) ‘"Gaza in Oslo": Social imaginaries in the political engagement of Norwegian minority youth’, Ethnicities 12(6): 821-843.

6. Critical race studies: discussing ‘race’, racialization, and racism (Laura Maria Führer)

@Twine, F. W., & Gallagher, C. (2008). The future of whiteness: a map of the "Third wave." Ethnic and Racial Studies, 31(1), 4–24.

@Gullestad, M. (2004). Blind slaves of our prejudices: Debating "culture" and "race" in Norway. Ethnos, 69(2), 177–203.

@McIntosh, L. (2014). Impossible presence: race, nation and the cultural politics of "being Norwegian." Ethnic and Racial Studies, 38(2), 309–325.

@Steve Garner & Saher Selod. (2015). The Racialization of Muslims: Empirical Studies of Islamophobia. Critical Sociology, 41(1), 9–19.

7. ‘Refugee crisis’? On asylum, asylum seekers and refugee studies (Katarina Mozeti?)

@Fontanari, Elena (2015). Confined to the threshold: The experiences of asylum seekers in Germany. City 19(5): 714-726. (13 pages)

@Malkki, Liisa H. (1996). Speechless Emissaries: Refugees, Humanitarianism, and Dehistoricization. Cultural Anthropology 11(3): 377-404. (28 pages)

@Serra Mingot, Ester & Jose de Arimateia da Cruz (2013). The Asylum-Migration Nexus: Can Motivations Shape the Concept of Coercion? The Sudanese Transit Case. Journal of Third World Studies 30(2): 175-190. (16 pages)

Additional voluntary reading:

@de Haas, Hein (2014). Migration Theory: Quo Vadis?. IMI Working Paper No. 100. Oxford, UK: University of Oxford. Available from: https://www.imi.ox.ac.uk/pdfs/wp/wp-100-14.pdf. (40 pages)

8: Migrant religious communities: Isolated islands? (Inger Furseth)

*Foley, Michael W. and Dean R. Hoge 2007. Religion and the New Immigrants, Ch. 1, p. 23-55. (33s)

@Furseth, Inger 2008. Social capital and immigrant religion. Nordic Journal of Religion and Society 21(2): 147-164. (14s)

@Levitt, Peggy 2004. Redefining the Boundaries of Belonging: The Institutional Character of Transnational Religious Life. Sociology of Religion 65 (1): 1-18. (18s)

9: Religious identity and practices among Muslims (Inger Furseth)

@Furseth, Inger 2011. The hijab: Boundary work and identity negotiations among immigrant Muslim women in the Los Angeles area. Review of Religious Research 54(2): 365-385. (19s)

*Jacobsen, Christine 2011. The Quest for Authenticity: Islamization Amongst Muslim Youth in Norway. In European Muslims and the Secular State, edited by Jocelyne Cesari og Seán McLoughlin, p.155-168. Aldershot: Ashgate. (14s)

@Nyhagen Predelli, Line 2004. Interpreting Gender in Islam: A Case Study of Gender Practice and Attitudes Among Migrant Muslim Women in Oslo, Norway. Gender & Society 18(4): 473-493. (20s)

10. Immigration and the Welfare State (Anniken Hagelund)

*D?lvik , J. E. (2013) "European Movements of Labour: Challenges for European Social Models", in Brochmann G. & E. Jurado eds. Europe's Immigration Challenge: Reconciling work, welfare and mobility London: Tauris.

*Brochmann, Grete and A. Hagelund (2012), Immigration Policy and the Scandinavian Welfare State 1945-2010 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan). Pp 1-25

11: Immigration and the populist radical right (Anniken Hagelund)

@Fligstein, N., A. Polyakova, and W. Sandholtz ‘European Integration, Nationalism and European Identity’ Journal of Common Market Studies, 50(1): 106-122 (16 pages).

@Rydgren, Jens (2007) "The sociology of the Radical Right" Annu. Rev. Sociol. 2007. 33:241–62 (21 pages)

@Mudde, Cas (2013) "Three decades of populist radical right parties in Western Europe: So what?" European Journal of Political Research 52: 1–19

@Jungar, A.C & A.R. Jupsk?s (2014) "Populist Radical Right Parties in the Nordic Region: A New and Distinct Party Family?" Scandinavian Political Studies 37(3): 2015-238

 

 

* = in compendium. Compendium will be available at Kopiutsalget at the bookstore Gnist Akademika at Blindern. Please bring your student card.

@ = articles are available online through Bibsys' subscriptions on e-journal databases for employees and students. To access the articles it is necessary to use a computer in the UiO network. This is because the UiO subscription access is controlled by IP-address.

To download the articles from computers outside the UiO network it is necessary to connect to the UiO network by VPN client. Some ejournal databases do not facilitate a direct link to the PDF-file. In such cases the link leads to the issue-index or the journal from where the correct article can be located and downloaded. Available curriculum articles on the internet are an advantage in the sense that required reading will be available to the students sooner than compendiums and the students may choose to read the text on the screen. Students pay for print-outs if exceeding their print quota, but this is also cheaper than printed compendium per page

 

Published Oct. 3, 2016 2:13 PM - Last modified Oct. 21, 2016 10:58 AM