• I kjønneste orden? Kvalitet og betydningen av kjønn i vurdering av professor- og dosentkompetanse i kunstfagene 

      Blix, Hilde Synnøve; Mittner, Lilli; Gjærum, Rikke Gürgens (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-06-24)
      Denne artikkelen har som mål å bidra til diskusjoner om begrepet kvalitet slik det framkommer i bedømmelsesprosesser ved professor- og dosentopprykk, gjennom å utforske hvorvidt og hvordan kjønn har betydning for måten kvalitet vurderes og kommer til uttrykk på i slike prosesser. Studien er en analyse av dybdeintervjuer med fem erfarne komitémedlemmer i kunstutdanningsfeltet i Norge. Vår analyse av ...
    • IKT-arbeid i helse- og omsorgssektoren 

      Andreassen, Hege Kristin; Obstfelder, Aud; Lotherington, Ann Therese (Chapter; Bokkapittel, 2019)
      This chapter reports from three studies of implementation and use of electronic patient records and systems for health information exchange. In contemporary health care such large ICT systems are implemented on all levels. Nevertheless, there is a growing awareness that the potential for crossinstitutional communication and quality improvements of the health- and care services that these systems ...
    • Implicit Affective Rivalry: A Behavioral and fMRI Study Combining Olfactory and Auditory Stimulation 

      Berthold-Losleben, Mark; Habel, Ute; Brehl, Anne-Kathrin; Freiherr, Jessica; Losleben, Katrin; Schneider, Frank; Amunts, Katrin; Kohn, Nils (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018-12-18)
      Aversive odors are highly salient stimuli that serve a protective function. Thus, emotional reactions elicited by negative odors may be hardly influenceable. We aim to elucidate if negative mood induced by negative odors can be modulated automatically by positively valenced stimuli. We included 32 healthy participants (16 men) in an fMRI design combining aversive and neutral olfactory stimuli with ...
    • In Limbo: Seven Families` Experiences of Encounter with Cancer Care i Norway 

      Solberg, Monica; Berg, Geir Vegard; Andreassen, Hege Kristin (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2021-11-26)
      Introduction: Like many other countries, Norway has seen a shift from inpatient to outpatient cancer care, with pathways aimed at improving the integration and coordination of health services. This study explores the perspectives of seven patients and their family members in light of this change. We focus on one particular phase of the pathway: the first encounter. Our interviews were set in the ...
    • Indigenous methodologies and philosophies in Academia (with an epilogue to a trial lecture) 

      Jensen, Ellen Marie (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019)
      Why should the practices of Indigenous methodologies as shaped by Indigenous epistemological and ontological perspectives be introduced into academia more fully? And tied to that: How does increased knowledge and understanding of Indigenous resistances over time fit with growing movements to engage in “truth and reconciliation” efforts in the ongoing treatment of Indigenous peoples?
    • Intersectionality 

      Losleben, Lisa Katrin; Musubika, Sarah (Chapter; Bokkapittel, 2023)
      An individual studying and working at a university is never seen as simply an “educator”, “administrative staff member”, or “student”, but as a complex being with a profession, function, and various identity markers like age, gender, sexuality, ability, ethnicity, skin colour, social background, language, religious beliefs, class, and academic line, among others. Drawing from Kimberlé Crenshaw’s ...
    • Introduction: guest editorial for special issue ‘gender and im(mobilities) 

      Pavlovskaya, Marianna; Gerrard, Siri; Aure, Marit (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-02-13)
      The research articles in this themed section examine gendered constellations of (im)mobilities with respect to work, class, livelihoods, and place. The issue includes selected articles presented at the interdisciplinary conference ‘Gender and (Im)mobilities in the Context of Work’ that took place in Tromsø, Norway June 15-17, 2016. To address different aspects of interlinking mobility, immobility, ...
    • Introduction: Research, Education, and Self-Determination in Sámi and Indigenous Journalism 

      Sara, Inker-Anni; Krøvel, Roy; Jensen, Ellen Marie; Fridman, Marina; Eira, Nils Johan (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2022)
      This article advances the critical importance of Indigenous journalism – both as a field and practice – for Indigenous peoples’ right to self-determination. The co-authors demonstrate this through discussions of education, scholarship, and dissemination. We begin with a review of the current state of Indigenous journalism education while making a strong case for the continued development and advancement ...
    • Knowledge base for the Erasmus+ project Voices of Women (VOW) 

      Meling, Lise Karin; Mittner, Lilli; Smith, Bettina; Klok, Janke (Research report; Forskningsrapport, 2022-11-23)
      This report builds the knowledge base for the transnational educational project ‘Voices of Women’ (https://voicesofwomen.eu) funded by the European Union. The report situates the VOW project within music and gender research in Norway, The Netherlands, and Germany. It argues for the need to educate agents of change and outlines the VOW approach along four pillars: (1) Performative Research (2) Unheard ...
    • Mobility Practices and Gender Contracts: Changes in Gender Relations in Coastal Areas of Norway 

      Gerrard, Siri (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2017-09-26)
      This article addresses the relationship between gender contracts and mobility practices in fishery communities of Norway’s High North, mainly Skarsvåg, Finnmark. By combining perspectives from gender research, anthropology and geography, the aim of this article is to contribute to a greater understanding of the interrelations between structural, material, and cultural changes in the context of ...
    • Multiple ontologies of Alzheimer’s disease in Still Alice and A Song for Martin: A feminist visual studies of technoscience perspective 

      Lukic, Dragana (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019-02-22)
      The prevalence of dementia is increasing worldwide, but there is still no hope of a cure. Huge resources go into biomedical research, whose reductive ‘enactment’ has severe consequences for women, who are predominantly affected by dementia.<br> To challenge such tragic enactment, this article considers ‘multiple ontologies’ of the most common type of dementia – Alzheimer’s disease (AD) – in the ...
    • No place for old women: a critical inquiry into age in later working life 

      Lotherington, Ann Therese; Obstfelder, Aud; Halford, Susan (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2016-02-11)
      Western countries currently face pressing demands to transform the labour market participation of older workers, in order to address the pressing economic and social challenges of an ageing population. However, in this article we argue that our understanding of older workers is limited by a dominant discourse that emphasises individuals rather than organisations; and valorises youth as the performative ...
    • Nordic eHealth Benchmarking. Towards evidence informed policies 

      Nøhr, Christian; Faxvaag, Arild; Chen, Hsi Tsai; Hardardóttir, Gudrun Audur; Hypponen, Hannele; Andreassen, Hege Kristin; Gilstad, Heidi; Jonsson, Heidin; Reponen, Jarmo; Kaipio, Johanna; Øvlisen, Maja; Kangas, Maarit; Bertelsen, Pernille; Koch, Sabine; Villumsen, Sidsel; Schmidt, Thomas; Vehko, Tuulikki; Vimarlund, Vivian (Research report; Forskningsrapport, 2020)
      The Nordic eHealth group forms the basis for ongoing knowledge sharing across the Nordic countries regarding strategic issues within digitalisation in healthcare. Digitalisation is increasingly becoming a central means for supporting the delivery of healthcare services around the globe. The Nordic region is regarded as a frontrunner when it comes to the implementation and use of digital solutions. ...
    • The passport as actor in the enactment of the Russian-Norwegian border 

      Lotherington, Ann Therese; Flemmen, Anne Britt (Chapter; Bokkapittel, 2019)
      The point of departure for this chapter is that the passport can only be understood with regard to the conduct and practical experience of those using it, and that the passport is embedded in ‘heterogeneous networks’ of people, practices and things (Timmermans and Berg 2003). The passport is nothing in and by itself but becomes of significance the moment a closed border is to be passed. The point ...
    • The personal is political yet again: Bringing struggles between gender equality and gendered next of kin onto the feminist agenda 

      Lotherington, Ann Therese; Obstfelder, Aud; Ursin, Gøril (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2018-05-18)
      In spite of feminist criticism of the welfare state, Norwegian society is frequently perceived as gender-equal. As a truism of public discourse, gender equality affirms a neoliberal understanding of individuals as able to act independently and to freely choose their course in life. This article disrupts that truism with an analysis of a transitional process that occurred to a seemingly free and ...
    • The Queen of the Arctic: Louise Arner Boyd 

      Isaksson, Elisabeth; Ryall, Anka (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-05-18)
      Louise Boyd (1887–1972) was a female pioneer in Arctic research whose legacy includes the exploration of north-east Greenland. In this Perspective piece, we use a broad interdisciplinary approach to investigate her career as a photographer and expedition leader. When documenting glacial retreat during the 1930s, she was at the forefront of the development of glaciology as a research discipline. ...
    • Re-conceptualizing the gap as a potential space of becoming: Exploring aesthetic experiences with people living with dementia 

      Mittner, Lilli; Dalby, Karoline; Gjærum, Rikke Gürgens (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2021-11-19)
      Purpose: In this paper we describe how co-creative art practices can involve people living with dementia as active citizens. We build on the Nordic Relational Model of Disability (GAP model) that conceptualizes levels of functioning as a mismatch between individual abilities and requirements from the environment.<p> <p>Design: We explore how reciprocal aesthetic experiences from two residential ...
    • Reproducing the Indigenous: John Møller’s Studio Portraits of Greenlanders in Context 

      Høvik, Ingeborg (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2016-08-30)
      Between 1889 and 1922, John Møller (1867–1935), the first professional Greenlandic photographer, produced more than 3000 glass plate negatives documenting life in Western Greenland around the turn of the twentieth century. Rooted in an internal understanding of self, Møller’s photographs played an important part in the formation of a contemporary image of Greenlandic indigenous identity. At the same ...
    • Resonating moments. Exploring socio-material connectivity through artistic encounters with people living with dementia 

      Mittner, Lilli (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2021-10-24)
      In this article, I introduce insights from new material feminist theories into the understanding of connectivity on the basis of an aesthetic analysis of artistic encounters with people living with dementia. I draw on data from a situated art intervention conducted within the Resonance Project at a residential care home in Northern Norway where researchers, artists, health-care professionals, people ...
    • Rettferdighet - Anmeldelse av Halsaa og Hellum (red), 2010 

      Lotherington, Ann Therese (Others; Andre, 2010)