University of Bergen Library

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

University of Bergen Library University of Bergen Library UiB Library Strategic plan 2010-2015 • The global knowledge society requires active networks and increased cooperation; internationally, nationally and regionally. • (...) • Participate in national and international academic library collaboration • Participate in international cooperation projects, particularly with a view to support institution-building in developing countries • (…) • Project development funds (seed money) – limited funding for the joint development of a cooperation project The city of Bergen • gateway to the fjords • Norway’s continental city • 250 000 The city of Bergen: brief history • Founded in 1070 • Norway’s capital until 1299 • thriving international port • research traditions • Bergen International Festival The city of Bergen: historical figures • Ibsen • Grieg • Bull • Nansen • Bjerknes • Rokkan The city of Bergen: brief history of Norway • Union • 17th May • Independence • 1905-2005 • Europe The city of Bergen: culture and commerce • the sea • international • education • unique infrastructure The city of Bergen: education and research • 3 university level institutions • 20+ research centres • 25 000 students • 5 000 employees The city of Bergen: major institutions: • the University of Bergen • the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration • Bergen University College • the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research • Haukeland University Hospital • the Christian Michelsens Research • and many more ... http://www.uib.no UiB: a brief history • 1825 Bergen Museum • 1873 leprosy bacterium - Hansen • 1907 Sundt Chair of Zoology • 1948 formal opening, Faculties of Medicine, Mathematics and Natural Science, Arts • 1970 Faculties of Dentistry, Social Sciences • 1980 Faculties of Psychology, Law • 1986 UNIFOB • 1990 Bertelsmann Prize • 2003 research, education, communication UiB: historical leadership • Gerhard Armauer Hansen • Fridtjof Nansen • Vilhelm Bjerknes • Stein Rokkan • Ludwig Wittgenstein* UiB: vision • gateway and meeting place • crossing borders • quality • leadership UiB: education • seven Faculties • one PhD • professional and academic / researcher training • language • ICT • crossing borders • reform Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Magnus Vabø Bergen Museum Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Bjørn Erik Larsen Bergen Museum Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Jiri Havran Jussbygget Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Jaro Hollan BBBygget Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Magnus Vabø HF Biblioteket Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Marius E. Hauge HF Biblioteket Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Marius E. Hauge HF Biblioteket Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Marius E. Hauge HF Biblioteket Foto: Universitetet i Bergen / Bjørn Erik Larsen HF Biblioteket http://www.uib.no/ub/en Norwegian system for higher education Kart BIBSYS – an Integrated Library System for h.e. in Norway • BIBSYS joint ILS catalogue • Search in BIBSYS UB key figures • Employees ~ 100 • Man years ~ 92 • Departments ~ 7 • Physical localities ~ 9 • Budget ~ 110 mill NOK • Subscriptions ~ 18 000 tidsskrift (14 000 e) What is Open Access? “The free availability of peer-reviewed literature on the public internet, permitting any user to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles .” Melissa Hagemann Program Officer Information Program Open Society Institute Open Access – basic principles . Scientific publications are made freely and immediately made accessible on the internet . Users have the right to read, download, copy, distribute, print and link to full text . Author retains the intellectual property right to the publication Open Access Initiatives – Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities – Budapest Open Access Initiative – Open Archives Initiative – Public Library of Science – SPARC Two roads to Open Access: “The Green Road to Open Access” Self archiving . Institutional archives / repositories . RePuB, Dspace@Cambridge, BORA . Subject archives: arXiv, cogPrints . NIH : PubMed Central Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA) • The University of Bergen’s Institutional archive • Launched in November 2004 • Contains mainly articles and theses, but also other material created by UiB academics • Part of the development of a national searching service, Norwegian Open Research Archives (NORA) ”The Golden Road to Open Access” DSpace repository software • Institutional repositories • Databases for digitized material • Printed material, photoes, sound, multimedia Information literacy • Information overload? • Search and write • Situated learning • Ethics is a focus area at the university • Reference management A Plagarism Carol Mulţumesc! .
Recommended publications
  • The Origins and Early Years of IASSIST
    The Origins and Early Years of IASSIST A Personal Prologue evolution of IASSIST offers a chance to This essay is based upon my presentation relive its early days vicariously and to on a plenary panel commemorating by Margaret O’Neillby Adams* celebrate the founding and subsequent the 25th anniversary of the founding contributions of the IASSIST community. of IASSIST at the IASSIST annual It also provides an opportunity to survey conference in Toronto, Canada, May, the milieu from which IASSIST emerged 1999. My panel colleagues were Carolyn and to document efforts of international Geda and Ekkehard Mochmann; Laine cooperation in the collection, processing, Ruus chaired the session. All three had storage, retrieval, exchange, and use of participated in IASSIST’s 1974 founding machine-readable social science data. meeting, also in Toronto, and remained active in IASSIST Looking back more than three decades on experiences of thereafter. Although I was part of the late 1960s social the early international data services community can also, science data archives community, at the time of the 1974 perhaps, contextualize contemporary digital library and meeting I was “retired” – at least temporarily, and did not archives challenges, issues, and initiatives. Maybe it can participate in IASSIST’s founding nor formative years. contribute to defining the unique professional identity of its multi-disciplinary members. Carolyn’s and Ekkehard’s 1999 presentations drew upon their personal experiences and memory. Carolyn focussed Hindsight often is 20/20. It seems to be human nature to on her experiences as the chair of the ad hoc committee minimize past challenges met when considering those that that created IASSIST and then as its first association loom and are still to be resolved.
    [Show full text]
  • Liesbet Hooghe -- Cv
    CURRICULUM VITAE: LIESBET HOOGHE Revised: May 2020 Born in Oudenaarde, Belgium Citizenship: United States/ European Union / Belgium Email: [email protected]; [email protected] Homepage: https://hooghe.web.unc.edu Chief Academic Appointment 2011— University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, W.R. Kenan Distinguished Professor of Political Science 2007—2011 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Zachary Taylor Smith Professor of Political Science 2005—2007 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Professor of Political Science 2000—2005 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Associate Professor of Political Science; Adjunct Professor Curriculum for International and Area Studies/ Global Studies (2000—) 1999—2000 University of Toronto, Associate Professor of Political Science 1994—1999 University of Toronto, Assistant Professor of Political Science 1991—1994 Nuffield College, Oxford University, Postdoctoral Research Officer Other Academic Appointments 2016— Robert Schuman Fellow, EUI, Florence 2004—2016 VU University Amsterdam, Chair in Multilevel Governance 1992—1994 K.U.Leuven, Lecturer of European Politics 1990—1992 K.U.Brussels, Lecturer of Political Science Education 1984—1989 K.U.Leuven, Ph.D. in Political Science 1987, 1988, 2013 Certificate of the Essex Summer School in Data Analysis and Collection 1980—1984 K.U.Leuven, Bachelor in Political Science Honors 2017 Daniel Elazar Distinguished Federalism Scholar Award from the Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations Section of the APSA 2016 Stein Rokkan Memorial Lecture
    [Show full text]
  • Stein Rokkan's
    ESP0010.1177/0958928718804932Journal of European Social PolicyFerrera 804932research-article2018 View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by AIR Universita degli studi di Milano Journal Of European Forum Social Policy Journal of European Social Policy 2019, Vol. 29(1) 3 –12 Disproved or vindicated? Stein © The Author(s) 2018 Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions Rokkan’s ‘impossibility theorem’ DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0958928718804932 10.1177/0958928718804932 on welfare democracy and journals.sagepub.com/home/esp European integration Maurizio Ferrera Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy Abstract In the mid-1970s, the great Norwegian scholar Stein Rokkan argued that the consolidation of the national welfare state was going to set definite limits to European integration. While the impetuous strengthening of the latter – from Maastricht to Lisbon – has largely disproved Rokkan’s factual expectations, developments during the last decade seem to have vindicated the theoretical insights which underpinned his original argument. If appropriately re-elaborated, such insights can help us to identify the conditions under which the economic and social dimension of the European Union might be reconciled in the future. Keywords Stein Rokkan, European integration, state-building, boundaries, welfare Introduction Stretching a bit my language – for the sake of argu- ment and debate – Rokkan’s reasoning might be The Norwegian social scientist Stein Rokkan (1921– defined as a sort of ‘impossibility theorem’: the 1979) remains an endless source of inspiration and nationalization of the citizenry inherent in the demo- fascination for scholars working on European poli- cratic welfare state was going to set definite limits to tics with a longue durée perspective.
    [Show full text]
  • The Centre-Periphery Dimension and Trust in Politicians: the Case of Norway
    The Centre-Periphery Dimension and Trust in Politicians: The Case of Norway This is an Accepted Manuscript version (AM), please refer to the original article published in Territory, Politics, Governance June 2019. DOI:10.1080/21622671.2019.1624191 Keywords: Political trust, Geography, Norway, Centre, Periphery, Trust in politicians, Urban, Rural Authors: 1) Jonas Stein, [email protected] – Department of Social Sciences, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Postboks 6050 Langnes, 9037 Tromsø, Norway 2) Marcus Buck, [email protected] – Department of Social Sciences, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Postboks 6050 Langnes, 9037 Tromsø, Norway 3) Hilde Bjørnå, [email protected] – Department of Social Sciences, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Postboks 6050 Langnes, 9037 Tromsø, Norway Institutional affiliation: UiT – The Arctic University of Norway (all authors) Contact: Jonas Stein, [email protected] – Department of Social Sciences, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Postboks 6050 Langnes, 9037 Tromsø, Norway, Telephone: +47 480 645 83 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2902-042X Twitter: https://twitter.com/TromsoJonas Acknowledgments: We thank the anonymous referees for useful suggestions and comments that have significantly improved the paper. We would also like to thank participants at NOPSA 2017 for comments on an earlier draft of this paper, and Tor Midtbø for consecutive comments and suggestions throughout the writing process. 1 The Centre-Periphery Dimension and Trust in Politicians: The Case of Norway Abstract Scholars have often studied social, political and economic factors affecting trust. This article considers the relationship between spatial location and trust in politicians. We hypothesise that the centre‒periphery framework developed by Stein Rokkan has explanatory value for the study of trust in politicians.
    [Show full text]
  • The Transformation of Cleavage Politics the 1997 Stein Rokkan Lecture
    European Journal of Political Research 33: 165–185, 1998. 165 c 1998 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands. The transformation of cleavage politics The 1997 Stein Rokkan lecture HANSPETER KRIESI Department of Political Science, University of Geneva, Switzerland Abstract. In this lecture I discuss the development of the social divisions in Western Europe and their translation into politics. I successively take up the three aspects embraced by the notion of ‘cleavages’ – their structural base, the political values of the groups involved, and their political articulation. My main argument is that the decline of traditional cleavages does not necessarily signify the end of structuration of politics by social divisions. There is ample empirical evidence for the existence of a new social division between two segments of the new middle class, which has important consequences for politics. This new social division is shown to be closely linked to the new ‘value cleavage’ although it is not able to fully account for the enormous political implications which contrasting value-orientations have today. Finally, I suggest that the political articulation of both the transformed class structure and the new configuration of values is strongly shaped by the political legacy of traditional cleavages. Introduction It is a great honor for me to present this year’s Stein Rokkan lecture. I would like to take this opportunity to discuss one particular aspect of the great Norwegian political scientist’s work which has given rise to a flurry of recent publications and which has preoccupied me in my own work, too. I am referring to the role of cleavages in contemporary Western European politics.
    [Show full text]
  • By Professor Richard Rose University of Strathclyde, Glasgow & Guest
    P 90-006 Instituti onali zi ng Political Science in Europe: A Dynamic Model by Professor Richard Rose University of Strathclyde, Glasgow & Guest Professor, Wissenschaftszentrum, Berlin November 1990 ABSTRACT A dynamic model is set out o f the h is to ric a l process by which p o litic a l science in Europe has developed from the sporadic writings of insightful and cosmopolitan individuals, often more or less isolated within their own country, into a profession with well defined standards for training and employment; in s titu tio n a lly based in national u n iv e rs ity systems; and with substantial trans-national links between individuals and institutions throughout Europe. The paper concludes with a review o f dynamic trends within political science and in the world of politics that may affect political science up to the year 2000. A paper for "Approaches to the Study of Political Science As a Discipline", Workshop of the IPSA Committee on the Study of P o litic a l Science as a D isc ip lin e , Paris, 21-22 May 1990. INSTITUTIONALIZING PROFESSIONAL POLITICAL SCIENCE IN EUROPE: A Dynamic Model by Professor Richard Rose Centre for the Study of Public Policy Abstract A dynamic model is set out of the historical process by which political science in Europe has developed from the sporadic writings of insightful and cosmopolitan individuals, often more or less isolated within their own country, into a profession with well defined standards for training and employment; institutionally based in national university systems; and with substantial trans-national links between individuals and institutions throughout Europe.
    [Show full text]
  • Workshop on the Performance of International Courts and Tribunals | Participant Biographies
    Participant Biographies Workshop on the Performance of International Courts and Tribunals Temple University | October 8-9, 2015 Workshop on the Performance of International Courts and Tribunals | Participant Biographies Steinar Andresen Research Professor Fridtjof Nansen Institute Professor Andresen’s main research focus is on international agreements, regimes and international organizations, especially in the area of environment, but also international resource policy and international health issues. Some empirical examples are the climate regime, the whaling regime and various UN bodies. He also focuses on the effectiveness of the agreements and organizations and the significance of 'institutional design', leadership and the relation between science and policy. Daniel Friedrich Behn Postdoctoral Research in International Investment Law and Arbitration UiO – Department of Public and International Law Dr. Daniel Behn, LLM, JD is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in International Investment Law and Arbitration at PluriCourts, where his research focuses broadly on theoretical issues in public international law with a specialized interest in international dispute settlement and adjudication. Currently his work deals with the development of investment treaty arbitration as a form of legitimate international adjudication and how issues of justice and fairness influence and motivate the manner in which international legal orders evolve. His previous working experience includes legal consultancy positions for the World Bank and the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED). He received his PhD from the University of Dundee. Pamela Bookman Assistant Visiting Professor of Law Temple University Beasley School of Law Pam Bookman’s research interests lie at the intersection of civil procedure and international business law. Her recent work focuses on the challenges of adapting the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • POLHØGDA POLHØGDA from the Home of Fridtjof Fra Fridtjof Nansens Bolig Til Nansen to the Fridtjof Nansen Fridtjof Nansens Institutt Institute Av Ivar M
    POLHØGDA POLHØGDA From the Home of Fridtjof Fra Fridtjof Nansens bolig til Nansen to the Fridtjof Nansen Fridtjof Nansens Institutt Institute av Ivar M. Liseter by Ivar M. Liseter 1 Fridtjof Nansen. Portrett tatt I London I 1893, like før han la ut på Framferden. Fridtjof Nansen. Potrait taken in London in 1893, just before he set in the Fram for the Arctic Sea. FRIDTJOF NANSEN Fridtjof Nansen (1861-1930) became Fridtjof Nansen (1861-1930) ble berømt famous in the 1880s and ’90s for his daring i 1880- og 90-årene for sine dristige expeditions across Greenland and the Arctic ekspedisjoner over Grønland og Polhavet. Ocean. In Norway, a nation then striving for I Norge, som den gang strebet mot independence, he became a national symbol selvstendighet, ble han et nasjonalt symbol and idol, but his fame travelled far and og et ideal, men hans berømmelse var wide. He described his expeditions in many internasjonal. Han beskrev sine ekspedisjoner books, often with his own illustrations, which i en rekke bøker som ble bestselgere i mange became bestsellers in many countries, and land, og han gjennomførte omfattende made extensive lecture tours in Europe and foredragsturneer i Europa og Amerika. America. His international contacts enabled Hans internasjonale kontakter satte ham him to play a key part in the successful i stand til å spille en betydelig rolle i Norges dissolution of the union between Sweden vellykkede løsrivelse fra unionen med Sverige and Norway in 1905, and he served as i 1905, og han tjenestegjorde som det independent Norway’s first ambassador to selvstendige Norges første ambassadør til the United Kingdom.
    [Show full text]
  • Stein Kuhnle Professor of Comparative Politics University of Bergen Status: February 2011
    June 25, 2021 Curriculum Vitae Stein Kuhnle Professor of Comparative Politics University of Bergen Status: February 2011 PERSONAL DATA Birth: Bergen, Norway, 22 November 1947. Citizenship: Norwegian. Private address: Boenesskogen 205, N-5154 Boenes, Norway Mobile phone: +47 92492279 Email address: [email protected] EDUCATION Cand. polit. Degree in Comparative Politics, University of Bergen, Norway, 1973. Dissertation: "Social Mobilization and Political Participation: The Nordic Countries c. 1850-1970". ACADEMIC POSITIONS Professor of Comparative Politics, University of Bergen (August 1982 – November 2017); Emeritus Professor, University of Bergen (December 2017 – lifetime); Professor of Comparative Social Policy, Hertie School, The University of Governance, Berlin (Jan. 2006 – Dec.2013); Emeritus Professor, Hertie School, The University of Governance, Berlin (January 2014- lifetime); Adjunct Professor, Stein Rokkan Centre, Bergen (January 2002 - December 2005) ; Adjunct Professor, Centre for Social Research, Bergen (May 1999 - December 2001); Research Director, Program on Welfare State Research, Norwegian Research Council for Applied Social Sciences (January 1988 - December 1994) ; Professor, Gastprofessur "Westeuropa", University of Mannheim (March - August 1987); Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Bergen (January 1979 - July 1982); University Fellow, University of Bergen (January 1976-December 1978); Research Assistant, University of Bergen (1972-1975) VISITING FELLOWSHIPS Visiting Professor, Soka University, Tokyo, 1
    [Show full text]
  • ISA Newsletter 1 View
    1. The new structure of the 2. Officers of the I.S.A. Association The International Sociological Association a) Executive Cornmittee introduced a series of radical changes in The Council of the I.S.A. elected the follo­ its constitutional structure at the Seventh wing officers for the 1970 -1974 periodo World Congress held in Varna in Bulgaria President: trom 13th to 19th of September 1970. Reuben HIII Calls for thoroughgoing changes in the sta­ Dept. of Sociology - University 01 M nnesota tutes were repeatedly heard at the Sixth 1014 Social Seience Building Congress held in Evian in France in Sep­ MINNEAPOllS, Minnesota 55455 (U.S.A.) tember 1966. The complaints against the structure raid down in the original statutes Vice-Presidents: T. B. Bottomore adopted at the Constituent Con~ress in 0510 in 1949 centred on three tr. ,mes: University of Sussex First the membership structure: the old sta­ School of Social Sciences - Arts Building tutes allowed individual membership in ex­ FALMER/BRIGHTON (Sussex) ceptional cases only and this set limits both (ENGLAND) to the finances of the Association and to Jivko Ochavkov the range of its efforts of communication; Bulgarian Sociological Association Secondly the procedures of nominations Blvd. Patriarch Evtimii 6 and elections: these were not open SOFIA (BULGARIA) enough and made it too easy to perpe­ Aldo E. Solari tuate an oligarchy of "insiders»; Division De Desarrollo Social Thirdly the status of the Research Com­ ILPES mittees : these had mushroomed since 1959 Casilla 1567 and established themselves as indispen­ SANTIAGO DE CHILE (CHILE) sable agencies for the organlzation of Members : activities between World Congresses, yet Hubert Guindon had not been recognized in the statutes Dept.
    [Show full text]
  • The Genesis of Norwegian Sociology* – a Story of Failures and Success
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by NORA - Norwegian Open Research Archives The genesis of Norwegian sociology* – a story of failures and success Published in Sosiologisk Årbok 2006. 3-4 Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund, Universitetet i Oslo [email protected] Department of Sociology & Human Geography University of Oslo P. O. Box 1096 Blindern N- 0317 OSLO Norway Telephone: + 47 22855257 Fax: + 47 22855253 Internet http://www.iss.uio.no/ Sosiologisk Årbok 2006.3–4 The genesis of Norwegian sociology * – a story of failures and success Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund Summary The institutionalisation of Norwegian sociology is an interesting history of failures and success, both personal and institutional. Given that we do not often take an interest in the history of our own discipline, busy as we usually are studying our contemporary society and developing our discipline, it might be of interest to take some time to reflect on our own past, on the forefathers and the legacy we inherited from them. By doing so we might get a better understanding of the present-day situation of Norwegian sociology. This essay addresses the genesis of the Norwegian sociology, covering the period from the early beginning of Norwegian sociology up to the phase of successful institutionalization of sociology as a discipline. We will briefly look at the most important forefather of Norwegian sociology, Eilert Sundt, before we proceed to the first attempts to institutionalise sociology, unsuccessfully. The most important names during this phase are Sigurd Ibsen and Arvid Brodersen. Then we will discuss the Næss group, the war-time network and the mythical history of the parachute jumper, and the so-called sea change after WWII, emphasising the important role of Arne Næss, Vilhelm Aubert, Stein Rokkan, Erik Rinde and Sverre Holm in establishing two institutions * This essay is an extended version of a talk I gave at the plenary session of the ISA’s RC28 conference in Oslo, 5-8 May 2005.
    [Show full text]
  • Cleavage Politics in Old and New Democracies Simon Bornschier University of Zurich | Institute for Political Science | [email protected]
    LIVING REVIEWS IN DEMOCRACY democracy.livingreviews.org | 2009 Cleavage Politics in Old and New Democracies Simon Bornschier University of Zurich | Institute for Political Science | [email protected] First published: October 2009 Most recent version available at http://www.livingreviews.org/lrd-2009-6 Stein Rokkan’s comparative historical account of party system formation in Western Europe has proved enormously influential due to the appeal of tying individual political behaviour to large-scale historical transformations. This article reviews the literature that has studied the genesis of cleavage- based party systems, as well as theoretical and empirical assessments of the degree to which they have remained stable or “frozen”. If it is adapted to allow for a more dynamic perspective, the cleavage approach also helps us to make sense of recent transformations of Western European party systems by pointing to new “critical junctures” that are likely to have a lasting impact on party competition and on individual political behaviour. In the second part of this review, I discuss applications of the approach outside Western Europe, focusing above all on Latin America and Central and Eastern Europe. If it is modified according to the specific historical trajectories of these countries, the cleavage concept helps us understand both how party systems become institutionalized in new democracies, as well as the type of conflicts they are likely to reflect. Furthermore, criticisms of social structural determinism have resulted in a new generation of scholarship that insists on paying more attention to the interplay of structure and agency in forging long-term bonds between parties and voters.
    [Show full text]