ABSTRACT

This book provides a comprehensive treatment of the role Nordic countries have played as exporters and importers of gender equality policies, and of how Europeanisation has framed the development and harmonisation of legislation and politics between the countries, with global consequences.

The diverse range of contributors present the argument that the European Union increasingly exerts influence on Nordic equality policy, without undermining the recent significance of the Nordic countries’ gender policy as models for countries all over the world . It demonstrates that differentiation and variation at national and regional levels in the Nordic countries, as well as in Europe in general, matter as much as integrational processes and inner adaptation to EU legislation and international laws. This book explores the limitations of the Europeanisation process and the political diversity of national and regional policies, together with the crucial ways practices in the family life and the labour market concerning gender equality depend on cultural and religious norms and group interests.

Nordic Gender Equality Policy in a Europeanisation Perspective is a key text for students and researchers seeking to understand the interrelations of Nordic and European Union gender policies.

 

chapter 2|18 pages

Same-sex families

Nordic harmonization and ties to Europe

chapter 3|12 pages

How could equal parental leaves be promoted in Europe?

Lessons from Swedish lesbian families

chapter 4|12 pages

Swedish Dads on export

On the relationship between fatherhood and “Swedishness” in strategic communication of Swedish family policy abroad, 1968–2017

chapter 5|19 pages

Bureaucracy of gender equality

Europeanisation in Nordic context?*

chapter 6|14 pages

“Lessons from Norway”

How gender quotas on corporate boards were transformed from unthinkable to exportable

chapter 10|14 pages

From quotas of men to gender mainstreaming

Gender equality policies in academia from the 1960s to the 2000s