• Occupational Closure and Wages in Norway 

      Bol, Thijs; Drange, Ida (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2016)
      Recent literature has pointed to occupational closure in order to explain wage inequality between occupations. The basic argument of occupational closure is that average occupational wages are higher in closed occupations ...
    • Områdesatsinger i Norge: Et skjørt kunnskapsgrunnlag for strategier og tiltak 

      Andersen, Bengt; Brattbakk, Ingar (Tidsskrift for boligforskning;Årgang 3, nr. 2-2020, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020-11-27)
      I artikkelen ser vi på argumentene for områdesatsinger i norsk bypolitikk som en bakgrunn for å diskutere fore- liggende forskning av slike satsinger. Gitt at norsk byforskning har en sterk overvekt av studier med data fra ...
    • On the willingness to and consequences of reporting research misconduct: The role of power relations 

      Horbach, Serge; Breit, Eric; Halffman, Willem; Mamelund, Svenn-Erik (Science and Engineering Ethics;Published 26 February 2020, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020-02-15)
      While attention to research integrity has been growing over the past decades, the processes of signalling and denouncing cases of research misconduct remain largely unstudied. In this article, we develop a ...
    • One giant leap for capitalistkind: Private enterprise in outer space 

      Shammas, Victor Lund; Holen, Tomas Bjerke (Palgrave Communications;Published 29 January 2019, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019-01-10)
      Outer space is becoming a space for capitalism. We are entering a new era of the commercialization of space, geared towards generating profits from satellite launches, space tourism, asteroid mining, and related ventures. ...
    • Organisational responses to alleged scientific misconduct: Sensemaking, sensegiving and sensehiding 

      Horbach, Serge; Breit, Eric; Mamelund, Svenn-Erik (Science and Public Policy; Volume 46, Issue 3, June 2019, Journal article; Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018-12-04)
      While a substantive literature has emerged on the prevalence, causes, and consequences of scientific misconduct, little is known about the organisational perspective in cases of (alleged) misconduct. We address this knowledge ...
    • Organising Ethics: The Case of the Norwegian Army 

      Forsberg, Ellen-Marie; Eidhamar, Are; Kristiansen, Svein-Tore (Etikk i praksis;1(1), Academic article, 2012)
      This article shows how institutionalism, a theory in organisational social science, provides a model for diagnosing organisational challenges that influence the ethical practices and integration in the Norwegian Army. ...
    • Organizational change and the risk of sickness absence: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of organizational unit-level change in hospitals 

      Grønstad, Anniken; Kjekshus, Lars Erik; Tjerbo, Trond; Bernstrøm, Vilde Hoff (BMC Health Services Research;19, Article number: 895 (2019), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019-11-14)
      Background: Organizational change is often associated with reduced employee health and increased sickness absence. However, most studies in the field accentuate major organizational change and often do not distinguish ...
    • Organizing capacities and union priorities in the hotel sector in Oslo, Dublin, and Toronto 

      Bergene, Ann Cecilie; Jordhus-Lier, David Christoffer; Underthun, Anders (Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies;4(3), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2014)
      In this article, we draw international comparisons between industrial relations regimes in the hotel sector and compare relevant trade union experiences in the selected metropolitan areas of Oslo, Dublin, and Toronto. ...
    • Parental Child-Rearing Conflicts Through Adolescence: Trajectories and Associations With Child Characteristics and Externalizing Patterns 

      Helland, Maren Sand; Kjeldsen, Anne; von Soest, Tilmann; Røysamb, Espen; Gustavson, Kristin; Nilsen, Wendy (Journal of Research on Adolescence;Volume 27, Issue 2, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017-06)
      Research on longitudinal interparental conflict patterns and offspring development is scarce. The population-based TOPP study (N = 459) was used to investigate 1) child-rearing conflict trajectories through four time ...
    • Parental chronic pain and internalizing symptoms in offspring: the role of adolescents’ social competence – the HUNT study 

      Kaasbøll, Jannike; Lydersen, Stian; Ranøyen, Ingunn; Nilsen, Wendy; Indredavik, Marit Sæbø (Journal of Pain Research;2018:11, Journal article; Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018-11-21)
      Background: A growing body of research suggests that the children of parents with chronic pain are at risk for internalizing symptoms. The mechanisms of such associations have not been as thoroughly examined. The aim of ...
    • The parrhesia of neo-fascism 

      Shammas, Victor Lund (International Journal of Zizek Studies;Vol 13, No 3, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)
      In his late lectures, Foucault developed the ancient Greek concept of parrhesia, a courage to speak the truth in the face of danger. While not entirely uncritical of the notion, Foucault seemed to find something of an ideal ...
    • Patent Ethics: The Misalignment of Views Betweenthe Patent System and the Wider Society 

      Forsberg, Ellen-Marie; Hanssen, Anders Braarud; Nielsen, Hanne Marie; Olesen, Ingrid (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)
      Concerns have been voiced about the ethical implications of patenting practices in the field of biotechnology. Some of these have also been incorporated into regulation, such as the European Commission Directive 98/44 on ...
    • Patent-holders on expert committees. Can there be a conflict of interest? 

      Thorstensen, Erik (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015)
      The presence of experts holding patents and simultaneously providing policy advice on areas in which they hold these patents poses several normative questions. Through a comparative study of several IPCC ...
    • Penal elitism: Anatomy of a professorial category 

      Shammas, Victor Lund (Critical Criminology;First Online 16 September, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)
      In recent decades, many scholars have invoked the concept of penal populism to explain the adoption of “tough on crime” measures and a wider politics of “law and order” across the post-industrialized world. But scholars ...
    • "Pensjon? Hvafforno?" Kunnskap og informasjonsbehov om pensjon. 

      Bergene, Ann Cecilie; Drange, Ida (Søkelys på arbeidslivet;32(3), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015)
      Gjennom pensjonsreformen (2009) ble noe av ansvaret og risikoen forbundet med pensjon flyttet over på innbyggerne, noe som nødvendiggjør at enkeltpersoner klarer å tilegne seg relevant informasjon. Denne artikkelen analyserer ...
    • Perceptions of local vulnerability and the relative importance of climate change in rural Ecuador 

      Gutierrez, Helen; Lee, Gwenyth O.; Corozo Angulo, Betty; Dimka, Jessica; Eisenberg, Joseph N.S.; Trostle, James A.; Hardin, Rebecca (Human Ecology;48, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020-07-22)
      Rural, natural resource dependent communities are especially vulnerable to climate change, and their input is critical in developing solutions, but the study of risk perception within and among vulnerable communities remains ...
    • The perils of parole hearings: California lifers, performative disadvantage and the ideology of insight 

      Shammas, Victor Lund (PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review;Volume 42, Issue 1, May 2019, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019-08-21)
      Following a series of transformative political and legal battles, California's overcrowded prison system has moved in the direction of moderate decarceration. A softer stance on punishment means that thousands of previously ...
    • The Places of Memory in a Square of Monuments: Conceptions of Past, Freedom and History at Szabadság Tér 

      Thorstensen, Erik (E-Journal of the American Hungarian Educators Association;5 (8), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2012)
      In this paper I try to approach contemporary Hungarian political culture through an analysis of the history of changing monuments at Szabadság Tér in Budapest. The paper has as its point of origin a protest/irredentist ...
    • Portuguese Medical Students’ Interest for Science and Research Declines after Freshman Year 

      Pereira, Margarida; Correia, Gustavo; Severo, Milton; Veríssimo, Ana Cristina; Ribeiro, Laura (Healthcare;Volume 9 / Issue 10, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021-10-12)
      The integration of scientific research into medical curricula remains insufficient despite its advantages for medical students’ professional development and the advancement of medicine. This study aimed to evaluate the ...
    • Post-concussion symptoms three months after mild-to-moderate TBI: characteristics of sick-listed patients referred to specialized treatment and consequences of intracranial injury 

      Fure, Silje Christine Reistad; Howe, Emilie; Spjelkavik, Øystein; Røe, Cecilie; Rike, Per-Ola; Olsen, Alexander; Ponsford, Jennie; Andelic, Nada; Løvstad, Marianne (Brain Injury;Volume 35, 2021 - Issue 9, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021-07-27)
      Objective: To present pre-injury, injury-related, work-related and post-injury characteristics, and to compare patients with and without traumatic intracranial abnormalities, in a treatment-seeking sample with persistent ...