MANAGING MULTICULTURAL SCANDINAVIA
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
Grete Brochmann is Professor at the Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo. She has published widely on international migration and the Scandinavian welfare model, and has been board member at PRIO, ARENA, Freedom of Expression Foundation, The Norwegian Refugee Council, The Swedish research Council FAS, among others. She has been a visiting scholar at Berkeley and Boston College, as well as Willy Brandt Professor at Malmö University. Brochmann is currently leading a governmental commission on international migration and the Norwegian welfare model.
Eric Einhorn is Professor Emeritus of Political Science. He is the author of “Liberalism and Social Democracy in Western Europe” in Comparative Democracy and Democratization, edited by H. Wiarda (2001); ”Can Welfare States Be Sustained in a Global Economy? Lessons from Scandinavia,” Political Science Quarterly, Spring 2010; and is co-author of “Scandinavia” in Europe Today, 5th edition, edited by R. Tiersky (2015); and Modern Welfare States: Scandinavian Politics and Policy in the Global Age (2003).
Peter Leonard is the Director of the Digital Humanities Lab at Yale University. He received his Ph.D. in Scandinavian literature from the University of Washington, and served as Fulbright Scholar during 2007-2008 at Uppsala University. His research focuses on ‘post-ethnic’ figurations of national belonging in European fiction, with emphasis on Scandinavian literature. Leonard also works with digital and quantitative methods in the humanities, including text mining, network analysis, image analysis and corpus query engines.
Nicole Stokes-DuPass is Associate Professor of Sociology at Holy Family University, Philadelphia. Her research focuses on the state, international migration, citizenship, social integration, and the Scandinavian and European states. She has published two books, Integration and New Limits on Citizenship Rights: Denmark and Beyond (2015) and Citizenship, Belonging and Nation-States in the 21st Century (2016) with Ramona Fruja, both titles with Palgrave-MacMillan. Her most recent book, Nation-States, Securitized Borders and Rapidly Changing Policies in the Age of Mass Migration with DeMond Miller is forthcoming in 2018.
Benjamin R. Teitelbaum is an ethnographer of contemporary radical nationalism in Europe and Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology and Affiliate in International Affairs at the University of Colorado, Boulder. His first book, Lions of the North: Sounds of the New Nordic Radical Nationalism was recently published through Oxford University Press. His public commentary on immigration and extremism has appeared in Foreign Policy, Dagbladet, DN, The New York Times.
Carly Elizabeth Schall is Assistant Professor the Department of Sociology, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis. In 2009-2010 she served as Fulbright IIE Scholar at the Department of History Stockholm University. Her research interests include social policy, health policy, political sociology, immigration, and citizenship. Her book The Rise and Fall of the Miraculous Welfare Machine: Nation, Immigration and Social Democracy in 20th Century Sweden was published at Cornell University Press in 2016.
Eric Einhorn is Professor Emeritus of Political Science. He is the author of “Liberalism and Social Democracy in Western Europe” in Comparative Democracy and Democratization, edited by H. Wiarda (2001); ”Can Welfare States Be Sustained in a Global Economy? Lessons from Scandinavia,” Political Science Quarterly, Spring 2010; and is co-author of “Scandinavia” in Europe Today, 5th edition, edited by R. Tiersky (2015); and Modern Welfare States: Scandinavian Politics and Policy in the Global Age (2003).
Peter Leonard is the Director of the Digital Humanities Lab at Yale University. He received his Ph.D. in Scandinavian literature from the University of Washington, and served as Fulbright Scholar during 2007-2008 at Uppsala University. His research focuses on ‘post-ethnic’ figurations of national belonging in European fiction, with emphasis on Scandinavian literature. Leonard also works with digital and quantitative methods in the humanities, including text mining, network analysis, image analysis and corpus query engines.
Nicole Stokes-DuPass is Associate Professor of Sociology at Holy Family University, Philadelphia. Her research focuses on the state, international migration, citizenship, social integration, and the Scandinavian and European states. She has published two books, Integration and New Limits on Citizenship Rights: Denmark and Beyond (2015) and Citizenship, Belonging and Nation-States in the 21st Century (2016) with Ramona Fruja, both titles with Palgrave-MacMillan. Her most recent book, Nation-States, Securitized Borders and Rapidly Changing Policies in the Age of Mass Migration with DeMond Miller is forthcoming in 2018.
Benjamin R. Teitelbaum is an ethnographer of contemporary radical nationalism in Europe and Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology and Affiliate in International Affairs at the University of Colorado, Boulder. His first book, Lions of the North: Sounds of the New Nordic Radical Nationalism was recently published through Oxford University Press. His public commentary on immigration and extremism has appeared in Foreign Policy, Dagbladet, DN, The New York Times.
Carly Elizabeth Schall is Assistant Professor the Department of Sociology, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis. In 2009-2010 she served as Fulbright IIE Scholar at the Department of History Stockholm University. Her research interests include social policy, health policy, political sociology, immigration, and citizenship. Her book The Rise and Fall of the Miraculous Welfare Machine: Nation, Immigration and Social Democracy in 20th Century Sweden was published at Cornell University Press in 2016.