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Kinabalu: jurnal perniagaan dan sains sosial = journal of business and social sciences
ISSN: 1394-4517
Women of science, technology, and medicine: a bibliography
In: Skriftserie fra Roskilde Universitetsbibliotek 15
Denmark - which type of welfare regime? and Resent political changes in Denmark: lecture notes
In: Social skriftserie / Den Sociale Højskole i Aarhus 5
An Act of Balance: Exploring the Boundaries of Librarianship in Times of Political Turmoil in Sweden and Denmark
In: Nordisk kulturpolitisk tidskrift: The Nordic journal of cultural policy, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 8-25
ISSN: 2000-8325
Statsvitenskapelige blindsoner: Iver Neumann i et faglig perspektiv
In: Internasjonal politikk, Band 77, Heft 2, S. 158
ISSN: 1891-1757
Iver Neumann has been an inter-disciplinary entrepreneur for political science in Norway. For Neumann, interdisciplinarity has been coupled with an understanding of politics as the search for meaning and identity. These features are well-developed in European political science, particularly within the field of international relations, but they are more rarely encountered in Norway. This brief article provides a sketch of political science as it evolved and matured in its Norwegian incarnation. In situating Iver Neumann within the discipline, I emphasise his international and eclectic orientation. The personal, national and international meet in Neumann's works, as do popular culture and politics.
Vocabulaire international de la diplomatique
In: Col·lecció oberta 28
Ivers oeuvre
In: Internasjonal politikk, Band 77, Heft 2, S. 148
ISSN: 1891-1757
Iver Neumann has been one of the most productive and visible foreign policy and IR scholars of his generation. He has had great influence both internationally and at NUPI. He has, however, not become a prophet in his own country. Norway's political science community has expressed little interest in the three traditions that have been the lasting anchor points in Neumann's works: the English School, the German tradition of critical theory and French post-modernism. This article suggests that Norwegian political studies have expressed a lack of curiosity – if not an active skepticism – towards political theory in general and continental approaches in particular. The errand here is not to wonder why. Rather, it is to provide the briefest of glimpses into some of the perspectives that lie outside the Anglo-American, methodological mainstream of Norwegian political science.