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Browsing by Subject "http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p7297"

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  • Nurminen, Johanna (2020)
    This Master’s thesis analyzes humanitarian action in a complex and protracted setting and introduces the underlying humanitarian aid paradigm. Particularly, the research focuses on the dynamics that have contributed towards the integration of humanitarianism and a wider set of political goals, namely the convergence of humanitarian, development and peace agendas, and elaborate how humanitarian actors are turning ‘triple nexus’ into doable practice. I have focused my attention especially on the meanings humanitarian actors have given to nexus-centered thinking and how they are operationalizing it in practice. A broader aim for the study is to connect these dynamic changes to the larger discussion on the future of humanitarianism and effects on humanitarian action. The primary data consists of interviews conducted with humanitarian aid professionals as well as a selection of policy documents. I have used discourse and documentary analysis to focus on discursive changes. My core argument is that the triple nexus as an aid policy reflect a larger shift in the humanitarian paradigm as a result of the politicisation of the operational environment of humanitarian action.
  • Holmström, Kaari Susanna (2023)
    Swedish migration policy has undergone a historic shift in the last decade. The aim of this thesis is to gain a deeper understanding of the role of research and researchers in Sweden’s migration policymaking process at a time of heightened politicization and policy change. Based on consensus, the Swedish policy process aims for informed decision making, drawing on research through governmental committees and research institutes. This mixed methods study utilizes a unique data set of 78 Swedish governmental committee reports that discuss migration and integration from 1980 to 2022. This quantitative data traces the number of committees and representation of researchers within these committees. Three expert interviews were conducted to address researchers’ perceived role in policymaking and how changes have impacted the use of research. This thesis employs Paul Sabatier’s Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF), focusing on coalitions within the migration subsystem and viewing policy change as a change in values. The expert interviewees highlighted how most researchers hold liberal views on migration, striving for open policies. This thesis found that the influence of researchers was greater when their values aligned with the values of the majority coalition and that researchers’ role was minimal in the shift towards restrictive policies. As migration became a salient issue in Sweden in the 1990s, there was a clear peak in the number of governmental committees and percentages of researchers, indicating that researchers had influence in defining migration policy. These numbers continued relatively high until 2022, but with more significant gaps. Committee reports were increasingly published in the second or third year of the governmental cycle, allowing the reigning government to initiate the committee and to vote on the proposed legislation. As migration became politicized, legislation was expedited, leaving little time for researchers’ input and using research symbolically at best. This was especially evident in the dramatic migration policy changes following the refugee crisis in 2015. This thesis concludes that ACF is an underused theoretical framework for migration subsystems, as explaining the policy process and change through values and beliefs was relevant in the case of Swedish migration policy. The findings illustrate that politicization and shifts in values have limited the role and instrumental influence of researchers in migration policymaking. Nonetheless, Sweden’s committee system and organizations such as Delmi continue to provide a channel for researchers to inform policymaking.