Katrine Fangen is an External Associate at PRIO.
News
Tuesday, 7 Sep 2021
Katrine Fangen, Professor at the University of Oslo and member of the PRIO project 'Reaching Out to Close the Border: The Transnationalization of Anti-Immigration Movements in Europe (MAM)' was recently interviewed in framtida.no on the role of female leaders in European right-wing movements (in Norwegian), arguing that it can be a strategic choice to put women in front of the movement both to soften the message and to appeal more to female voters.
Book Review
Popular Article in Right Now!
Popular Article in Forskersonen.no
Popular Article in Forskersonen.no
Journal Article in Ethnicities
Journal Article in Patterns of Prejudice
Journal Article in Journal of Political Ideologies
Journal Article in Politics, Religion & Ideology
Journal Article in Politics, Religion & Ideology
Journal Article in Poetics
Katrine Fangen, Professor at the University of Oslo and member of the PRIO project 'Reaching Out to Close the Border: The Transnationalization of Anti-Immigration Movements in Europe (MAM)' was recently interviewed in framtida.no on the role of female leaders in European right-wing movements (in Norwegian), arguing that it can be a strategic choice to put women in front of the movement both to soften the message and to appeal more to female voters.
New article published (Open Access) in Ethnicities, entitled ‘A state-centred conception of nationhood? Norwegian bureaucrats on the nation' by Marta Bivand Erdal and Katrine Fangen. The article analyses interviews with bureacrats - and ponders the question: Who is the 'imagined community' which those tasked with the state's nation building efforts are thinking of?
In the article, published in the journal Politics, Religion & Ideology, Katrine Fangen examines two anti-Islamic Facebook groups.
On the 28th of May this year, The Department of Sociology and Human Geography at the University of Oslo (UiO) hosted a Zoom webinar on questions of nationalism and populism in in the midst of the corona pandemic. Several paradoxes of the present situation are pointed out.