New article in the journal Regulation & Governance on the Nordic governments’ responses to the pandemic

Mads Dagnis Jensen, has together with several Nordic researchers, published an article in the journal Regulation & Governance about how the governments of the Nordic countries have handled the COVID-19 pandemic.

mads_dagnis_jensen
02/02/2023

Government responses to the Covid-19 pandemic in the Nordic states—Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden—exhibit similarities and differences. This article investigates the extent to which crisis policymaking diverges from normal policymaking within the Nordic countries and whether variations between the countries are associated with the role of expertise and the level of politicization. Government responses are analyzed in terms of governance arrangements and regulatory instruments. Findings demonstrate some deviation from normal policymaking within and considerable variation between the Nordic countries, as Denmark, Finland, and to some extent Norway exhibit similar patterns with hierarchical command and control governance arrangements, while Iceland, in some instances, resembles the case of Sweden, which has made use of network-based governance. The article shows that the higher the influence of experts, the more likely it is that the governance arrangement will be network-based.

 

You can watch a video about the article here.

The page was last edited by: Department of International Economics, Government and Business // 02/02/2023