Universitas 17/2019
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Mette Torp : Studentopprøret I Det Norske Studentersamfund
Arbeiderhistorie 2003 87 METTE TORP Studentopprøret i Det Norske Studentersamfund Kjært barn har mange navn. Årene fra mere på Det Norske Studentersamfunds 1968 og begynnelsen av 1970-tallet er rolle i forbindelse med «1968».3 et slikt barn. Mange har stilt spørsmå- let om Norge hadde noe «1968». His- torikeren Tor Egil Førland spør i en Hvorfor en studie av Det Norske artikkel i Nytt Norsk Tidsskrift om Studentersamfund? ikke opprøret fant sted på (begynnel- Studentersamfundet i Oslo hadde høy sen av) 1970-tallet like mye som (slut- status og prestisje, særlig i det politiske ten av) 1960-tallet?1 Ved trettiårsjubi- miljøet. DNS var også på mange måter leet for 1968, utga historikeren Harald det akademiske miljøets ansikt utad i Berntsen et selvbiografisk essay med samfunnet og hadde en helt spesiell sen- tittelen Det lange friminuttet. Et essay tral plass i den norske offentligheten. om ungdom i 1960-åra. Her gir han ut- Aftenposten og Dagbladet hadde ukentli- trykk for et annet syn nemlig at valget ge referater fra møtene som ble avholdt av den sosialistiske Tore Linné Erik- hver lørdag kveld. De øvrige avisene sen til formann i Det Norske Studen- hadde ofte nyheter og artikler som gjen- tersamfund (DNS) for høstsemesteret gav det som skjedde. Nyhetsbyråene 1968 kunne betegnes som det norske meddelte alltid resultatene fra general- svaret på 1968: «Hvis noe var Norges forsamlingene der ny formann ble valgt «1968», var det dette», skriver Bernt- hvert semester. Lokalavisene rundt om i sen. Som forklaring på hvorfor dette landet brukte atskillig med spalteplass kunne sees på som et opprør skriver på valgene og refererte også ofte fra mø- han at Eriksen og hans styre hadde så tene. -
Tore Nilsen Cv.Pdf
CURRICULUM VITAE 1 October 2010 Name: Tore NILSSEN Born: 16 December 1959, in Bergen, Norway. Address: Department of Economics, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1095 Blindern, NO-0317 Oslo, Norway. Phone: +47 22 85 49 36. Fax: +47 22 85 50 35. E-mail: [email protected]. Main research areas: Industrial organization (consumer switching costs; horizontal mergers; competition policy; location; R&D; advertising; media industries; vertical relations). Political economy (bureaucracy; competition policy). Information economics (insurance; renegotiation; dynamics of competitive screening; pooling; mechanism design; health insurance). Education: “Siviløkonom” (undergraduate, business administration), Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration (NSEBA), Bergen, 1983. Master degree, Economics, NSEBA, 1987. Research Fee Student, London School of Economics, 1988-89. Dr.oecon. (Ph.D.), Economics, NSEBA, 1991. Present position: Professor, Department of Economics, University of Oslo, 1997-. Previous positions: Researcher, Christian Michelsen Institute, Bergen, 1983-1986. Scholar, NSEBA, 1987-1991. Assistant professor, NSEBA, 1991. Associate professor, Norwegian School of Management, Oslo, 1992-1994. Visiting researcher, Norges Bank (Central Bank of Norway), 1993-1994. Associate professor, Department of Economics, University of Oslo, 1995-1997. Visiting scholar, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley, 1999-2000. Referee for international journals, etc.: American Economic Review Annals of Operations Research Australian -
ARENA Annual Report 2015
ARENA Centre for European Studies University of Oslo Annual report 2015 Introduction ARENA Centre for European Studies is an internationally regarded research centre at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Oslo. The centre conducts theoretically oriented, empirically informed basic research on the dynamics of the evolving European political order. Our research is organised along four key dimensions of European political order: the democratic dimension; the EU’s executive dimension; the knowledge dimension and the external dimension. This report extensively outlines ARENA’s activities in 2015, which proved a remarkable year in several regards. The 2015 publication rate exceeded that of previous years. Our staff continuously succeed in disseminating high-level research through peer-reviewed publications. Amongst these were two special issues of academic journals and the Palgrave Handbook of the European Administrative System. Against the backdrop of the upcoming Brexit referendum, the book The European Union’s Non-members also gained increased relevance outside academia. Moreover, in stark competition, ARENA succeeded in attracting several new project grants. The GLOBUS project funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 is one of the most extensive ones in ARENA’s history. The project is led by Helene Sjursen and will analyse the concept of global justice and examine the EU’s role as a global actor. It brings together expertise from eight partner universities worldwide and will be launched in 2016. Another project that won through in 2015 is Cathrine Holst and Johan Christensen’s EUREX project, which is to assess the role of expertise in policy-making. Funded by the Research Council of Norway, EUREX will also start in 2016. -
PJ (Praktisches Jahr Im Ausland)
Liste von Kliniken für ein Auslands-PJ (Praktisches Jahr im Ausland) Erstellt von The Electives Network (TEN), einer Not-For-Profit-Organisation mit Hauptsitz in England, welche die weltweit größte Datenbank mit Kliniken für Medizinstudierende zur Verfügung stellt. Schaue gerne mal bei uns herein http://www.electives.net/. Einen unbegrenzten Zugang zu allen Informationen erhältst Du in Deutschland über MLP https://www.mlp.de/#/studenten/individuelle-beratung/humanmediziner/electives-network Stand: August 2016 Hier findest Du eine Liste all der uns derzeit Bekannten Kliniken, welche von mindestens einem Landesprüfungsamt (LPA) als PJ-Klinik anerkannt werden oder wurden. Beachte: Diese Liste hebt in keinster Weise die Notwendigkeit auf, dass Du mit deinem für dich zuständigen LPA Rücksprache hältst, ob Deine Wunsch-Klinik auch von diesem LPA anerkannt wird. Setze Dich auf jeden Fall vor der konkreten Planung und der Reise mit dem LPA in Verbindung, um nicht nach Abschluss Deines PJ-Tertials eine böse Überraschung zu erleben und das PJ-Tertial nicht, oder nur unter großem Aufwand, angerechnet zu bekommen. Manche ausländischen Universitäten nehmen, obgleich als PJ-Klinik anerkannt, nicht immer ausländische Studierende an. So reservieren sie zum Beispiel in Zeiten, in denen sie zu viele Anfragen haben, die Praktikumsplätze für inländische Studierende. Deshalb muss auch frühzeitig bei der jeweiligen Fakultät/Klinik nachgefragt werden. Andere Universitäten verlieren ihren Anerkennungsstatus als PJ-Klinik, da sich z. B. ihre Bettenzahl in den Bereichen Innere oder Chirurgie ändert und sie somit nicht mehr die Bedingungen der Approbationsordnung für Ärzte (ÄAppO) erfüllen. Auch bieten einige ausländische Universitäten nur eine 12-wöchige Ausbildung an und ein Splitten des Tertials ist oftmals nicht erlaubt. -
Towards Spatial Assimilation?
Towards Spatial Assimilation? Neighbourhood Attainment among non-Western Immigrant Descendants in the Oslo Region Pål Oskar Hundebo Master Degree Thesis in Sociology Department of Sociology and Human Geography Faculty of Social Sciences UNIVERSITY OF OSLO November 2016 II Towards Spatial Assimilation? Neighbourhood Attainment among non-Western Immigrant Descendants in the Oslo Region Pål Oskar Hundebo Master Degree Thesis in Sociology Department of Sociology and Human Geography Faculty of Social Sciences UNIVERSITITY OF OSLO November 2016 III © Pål Oskar Hundebo 2016 Towards Spatial Assimilation? Neighbourhood Attainment among non-Western Immigrant Descendants in the Oslo Region Pål Oskar Hundebo http://www.duo.uio.no/ Print: Allkopi, Oslo IV Abstract The Oslo region has seen a substantial increase in the immigrant population during the last five decades. In Oslo, as in many other European cities, the non-Western population is far from evenly distributed throughout the city. The aim of this thesis is to explore developments in neighbourhood concentrations of non-Western immigrants with a specific focus on adult descendants of Turkish, Moroccan, Indian, Pakistani and Vietnamese immigrants. The main inquiry is whether and to what extent non-Western immigrant descendants integrate spatially in adulthood, in terms of settling in neighbourhoods that are characterised by similar levels of non-Western immigrant population, as compared with their ethnic Norwegian peers. Variables measuring social background characteristics, as well as, socioeconomic and cultural resources are explored in order to identify associations between these and the proportion of non-Western immigrant population in the neighbourhoods where the descendants settle as adults. Moreover, associations between proportion of non-Westerners in the descendants’ origin and destination neighbourhood are explored.