Category Archives: Volume 21, no. 1 (2026)

Civic Engagement and Trust among Immigrants in Iceland

In this article cultural encounters of immigrants with Icelandic society are empirically examined. This is done by measuring their civic engagement or social

and political participation as well as the level of institutional trust. These measurements are grounded in classical scholarly literature on civic engagement (Almond & Verba, 1963, 1989), on the one hand, and trust and social capital on the other (Putnam, 1993). Based on several variables derived from survey data gathered among Icelandic immigrants in 2018 (N=2.211), we construct two indices: an index of institutional trust and an index of civic engagement (Participatory Index). These indices are then compared against different background variables, drawing out important characteristics that shed light on acculturation and the negotiation between the Icelandic and various immigrant cultures and values. Additionally, we use data from a survey conducted among natives in Iceland to compare some variables with data collected from immigrants. As part of the examination of the general cultural encounters of immigrants in Iceland, their place of residence is an important variable.  Through this data it is possible to make inferences about differences and similarities between immigrants living in urban and rural areas of an Arctic society.

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Conflict Mitigation and Community Policing: Examining NPF and NSCDC Conflict Management Strategies in North-Central Nigeria

This study investigates the conflict management strategies employed by the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC) in North-Central Nigeria. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews and focus groups conducted under the USIP Conflict Mitigation and Community Policing initiatives, the research examines the effectiveness of intervention models within contexts of ethnoreligious tensions and organized violence. Employing conflict analysis and Evidence-Based Policing frameworks, the study assesses operational achievements and persistent gaps.  The findings highlight the need for institutional collaboration and capacity building, emphasizing that participatory approaches are essential to achieving sustainable peace in the region.

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Amalgamation Reforms in Iceland: How strategies have shaped conflicts and outcomes

Two comprehensive municipal structural reforms have been implemented in Iceland, the first one starting in 1991 and ending in 1993, and the second one starting in 2003 and ending in 2005. Other reform intentions by governments and ministers have been planned but have not come to be a reform. The aim of this article is to identify the reform strategies used, the conflicts that arose, the outcomes of the reforms and how strategies, conflicts and outcomes are connected. Baldersheim and Rose’s (2010) framework on how territorial reform strategies can shape conflicts that arise, as well as the outcomes of the reforms will be used in the analysis of these two structural reforms. The analysis is based on secondary data from government reports, official data on municipal referendums, a 1994 survey, and an evaluation report. The main finding is that both these reforms were top-down-oriented, which contributed to strong resistance, especially in small and peripheral municipalities. Both reforms reached their peak in referendums, which were not successful at all, primarily because the people in small municipalities voted against amalgamation. In both reforms, the Icelandic Association of Local Authorities supported the government’s top-down approach to implement comprehensive amalgamation reforms, while most of the smaller member municipalities opposed amalgamation. The article explains how the Association’s internal structure has created this paradox. Despite very limited success in the 1993 and 2005 referendums, the aftermath of the 1993 referendum shows that the effort to try to convince small municipalities to amalgamate indirectly led to an avalanche of voluntary bottom-up oriented amalgamations between 1994 and 2002, where the number of municipalities went down from 196 to 105.

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Alþjóðaöryggismál: umræða um hugmyndir og kenningar

Greinin varpar ljósi á alþjóðaöryggismál út frá hugmyndum um hlutverk ríkja, mannlegs eðlis, átaka og sögulegra minninga. Öryggisfræðum og kenningum alþjóðasamskipta, nýraunhyggju, mótunarhyggju og frjálslyndisstefnu, er beitt til þess greina viðfangsefnið. Tilgáta þessa verks er að alþjóðaöryggi sé mikilvægasta viðfangsefni alþjóðasamskipta og svo hafi verið um langa hríð þar sem hernaðaröryggi hafi leikið stærsta hlutverkið. En jafnvel þó hagsmunir ríkja og öryggi þeirra skipti máli leika einstaklingar, sjálfsmynd, gildi þeirra og hugmyndir um öryggi ekki síður stórt hlutverk í alþjóðaöryggismálum.

The paper discusses international security based on ideas about the role of the state, human nature, war and historical memory. International security studies and two theories of international relations, neo-realism (e. structural realism) and constructivism, are used to analyse the subject. In addition, liberalism is compared with realism. It is argued that neo-realism and constructivism, security studies and historical memory best describe state relations, individual decisions, the international system and international security. The work is Icelandic and as such has an unquestionable value, as there are few academic publications or articles on the subject in Icelandic. The hypothesis of this work is that the most important subject of international relations is security, and military security has played the central role. But even if states try to secure their interests and war is likely due to the interests of states and the structure of the international system. Individuals, their identity, values, historical memory ​​and ideas about security are no less important.

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The Role of Immigrants’ Language Skills in Perceived Community Quality of Life and Trust in Institutions: Evidence from Iceland

Proficiency in the language of the receiving society is widely recognized as an important aspect of immigrants’ inclusion, but there is limited research on the associations among immigrants’ language proficiency, quality of life, and trust in institutions. We drew on a large-scale quantitative survey of immigrants in Iceland (N=2,139) and conducted two regression analyses to examine associations between immigrants’ self-reported proficiency in Icelandic and English and their Icelandic use with various demographic, economic, and social factors. Findings indicate that social and structural factors have a much stronger association with perceived community quality of life and institutional trust than language does.

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Amusement and Entertainment in the Time of Giacomo Casanova’s Russian Journey (Celebrating the 300th Anniversary of His Birth, 1725–2025)

In the century of the Enlightenment, Russia, aimed at emerging from national and confessional isolation, was able to get in touch with other countries open to new ideas. This attempt to integrate into Eighteenth-century European culture and politics is reflected as well in various forms of entertainment and amusement spreading both in the noble estates and at the Imperial Court. Among the various manifestations of socialization and fun, will be examined Card games, Masquerades, Balls, Military Parades, Tournaments, and Fireworks, closely observed and lively portrayed by Giacomo Casanova (1725-1798) in his Mémoires de ma Vie, during his journey to Russia (1764-1765).

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Shining Islands: The Oura Archipelago and Internal Landscapes of the Rääkäri (The Drift-Netter)

The Oura Archipelago is a biocultural landscape in the northern Baltic Sea. It is home to a unique small-scale marine fishing and seal hunting community. Lifeways in Oura have been shaped by innovations in fisheries, economic incentives and the opportunities and limits created by the northern marine ecosystem. We undertake a theoretical review of Campling and Colás to explore elements of the economic-natural links that exist in Oura. Until the 1940s the community was able to organize its own governance relatively autonomously. From the mid-1900s onwards, however, modernization of fisheries in Finland and increased environmental pollution combined to alter two of Oura’s iconic practices – drift netting and seal hunting. Later, in the 2010s, strict nature protection policies increased the influence and role of external governance on the islands. This article explores the political ecology of these changes and fishers’ capacity to self-organise their landscapes in response to shifting realities experienced on the islands.The article concludes with a discussion of the latest solution spaces that may provide ways to revitalize this unique biocultural landscape.

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Abstracts of the 6th sustainability conference at the University of Akureyri, Iceland

The 6th sustainability conference at the University of Akureyri, co-hosted by the Environmental Council and the Stefansson Arctic Institute at the University of Akureyri, received more abstracts and registrations than ever. Albeit globally, public interest in the climate crisis decreased over the past year in view of the threats to democracy, violation of international law at a large scale, economic pressures, incinerated by unequal wars and genocide, climate change does not stop. By contrast, it was accelerated by the very same wars and genocide, the very same demolition of democracy, the economic crises, and the shift in attention. Scientific, physical evidence makes the dire reality of the accelerating crisis clear: 2025 has been one of the top three warmest years on record, and ocean heat content reached dangerous levels. The world is not on track to meet the 1.5°C target.

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Digesting the Alien

On November 19, 2025, my longtime friend and colleague Giorgio Baruchello launched a new book, Uncanny Soulscapes in Uncustomary Dreamscope: Collected Philosophical Fragments. The book departs radically from conventional scholarly forms but not from the subject of his recent scholarly investigations, the “frequently interlaced human phenomena [of] humour and cruelty” (xiv, Baruchello’s emphasis). Uncanny Soulscapes … Continue reading Digesting the Alien

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The Philosophical Rationale of Northwest Passage Books

1. I started NWP books out of a kind of pedagogical desperation. I was a rookie prof at Heritage College, teaching my intro class in more or less the same way it had been taught to me when I was a student myself. I noticed half-way through the semester that quite a lot of my … Continue reading The Philosophical Rationale of Northwest Passage Books

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Philosophical Fragments: A new book series from Northwest Passage Books

Homo sum. Humani nihil a me alienum puto. – Terence   Introduction Part One: D&D Here comes Philosophical Fragments: A new book series from Northwest Passage Books. It is a foray into literature, drama, pastiche, puppetry, and even poetry; albeit, principally and primarily, in a satirical, comic, farcical, and/or comedic light—a work of humour, in … Continue reading Philosophical Fragments: A new book series from Northwest Passage Books

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Personal Memoirs and Dynamic Thoughts About “Dynamo”

Ívar Helgason 05.05.-1976 – Musical Theater actor, Singer, singing Teacher Personal memoirs on reading the dialogue “Dynamo” with co-actor Villli Bragason at the public meeting “Humour and Culture”. Caféteria of Amtsbókasafnið – Akureyri Municipal Library on the 19th of november 2025: It was quite fun to perform with Villi Bragason, the awkward situations of “Dynamo,”* … Continue reading Personal Memoirs and Dynamic Thoughts About “Dynamo”

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Humor as a Teaching Tool in Science

Scientific disciplines such as physiology and biochemistry are often perceived by students as “dry” or conceptually overwhelming. These subjects require mastery of complex terminology, abstract biochemical pathways, and intricate physiological mechanisms. Such cognitive demands may increase student anxiety and reduce classroom participation. In this context, humor emerges as a pedagogical strategy that can help counteract … Continue reading Humor as a Teaching Tool in Science

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What Else but to Laugh?

The Comedy, the Comedy! Mistah Kurtz, he resurrected 1. On Academia, Aeronauts, and Carbon in General Once I was at a huge conference center abroad, attending one of the scientific conferences that were simultaneously happening at this glorious venue. As it usually is in the predestination explained by binary logic, I was aware only of … Continue reading What Else but to Laugh?

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Much A-be About No-thing: Tristan Burt’s book for De Gruyter’s Studies in Philosophy of Humor, “The Joke of Reality”

Introduction Let me commence with a juicy quote from the book at issue: [N]othing stands everything on its head. This is why it is fitting that this book forms part of what seems to be a very minor area of philosophical enquiry, i.e., the philosophy of humor. Immediately, from the perspective of the “sensible ham”, … Continue reading Much A-be About No-thing: Tristan Burt’s book for De Gruyter’s Studies in Philosophy of Humor, “The Joke of Reality”

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Katarina Leppänen and Auður Aðalsteinsdóttir (eds.), Creative Responses to Environmental Crises in Nordic Art and Literature (Lanham:, MD Lexington Books, 2025)

This anthology, written from the disciplines of ecological literacy and arts, focuses on creative responses to climate change and other global environmental crises. The term “response” is understood in a broad sense and may presuppose any self-reflective action, an intellectual or physical reaction to a perceived (ecological) situation or problem. The texts are deliberately not … Continue reading Katarina Leppänen and Auður Aðalsteinsdóttir (eds.), Creative Responses to Environmental Crises in Nordic Art and Literature (Lanham:, MD Lexington Books, 2025)

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Páll Björnsson, Dagur þjóðar: Þróun 17. júní hátíðarhalda á 19. og 20. öld (Reykjavík: Sögufélag, 2025)

Páll Björnsson, prófessor í nútímafræði við Háskólann á Akureyri, hefur valið sér ímyndarsköpun og varðveislu ímynda meðal Íslendinga sem viðfangsefni í rannsóknum sínum um alllangt skeið. Afraksturinn hefur meðal annars birst í bókunum Jón forseti allur? Táknmyndir þjóðhetju frá andláti til samtíðar (2011) og Ættarnöfn á Íslandi: Átök um þjóðararf og ímyndir (2021), auk ritgerða … Continue reading Páll Björnsson, Dagur þjóðar: Þróun 17. júní hátíðarhalda á 19. og 20. öld (Reykjavík: Sögufélag, 2025)

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Guglielmo Meardi (ed.) Research Handbook on Migration and Employment (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2024)

The “Research Handbook on Migration and Employment” brings together interdisciplinary perspectives to further understanding of the complex relationship between migration and labour markets. The editor of the handbook is Guglielmo Meardi, Professor of Sociology of Work and Economy and Dean of the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences at the Scuola Normale Superiore, Italy. The … Continue reading Guglielmo Meardi (ed.) Research Handbook on Migration and Employment (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2024)

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Francesco Sangriso (ed.), Snorri Sturluson. «Heimskringla»: le saghe dei re di Norvegia, VI (Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso, 2021)

Another step in the marathon across Snorri Sturlson’s Heimskringla – this sixth volume of its Italian edition – highlights one more time the extent of Sangriso’s remarkable scholarship. After the Óláfs saga Helga, the longest section of the Heimskringla, dealing with the life and deeds of the saint-king Óláfr Haraldsson, the focus is now placed … Continue reading Francesco Sangriso (ed.), Snorri Sturluson. «Heimskringla»: le saghe dei re di Norvegia, VI (Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso, 2021)

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Mikael M. Karlsson, Þungir þankar: Ritgerðir um heimspeki. Edited by Elmar Geir Unnsteinsson (Reykjavík: Heimspekistofnun – Háskólaútgáfan, 2023)

Mikael M. Karlsson (b. 1943) is professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Iceland (UI). Born and raised in the United States, he emigrated to Iceland in the early 1970s to join a couple of young philosophers in developing a newly founded a philosophy program at UI, the only university in Iceland at the … Continue reading Mikael M. Karlsson, Þungir þankar: Ritgerðir um heimspeki. Edited by Elmar Geir Unnsteinsson (Reykjavík: Heimspekistofnun – Háskólaútgáfan, 2023)

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From Arctic Exceptionalism to Arctic Imperialism? Will America’s Proposed Expansion to Greenland Restore the Arctic as a Zone of Peace, or Usher Forth a New Era of Arctic Imperialism?

Currents of Arctic Exceptionalism Reborn It’s no coincidence that last summer’s peace summit between President Trump and Russian strongman Vladimir Putin is took place north of sixty in America’s 49th state. Much media coverage called attention to Alaska’s long and proud heritage as part of the Russian Empire courtesy of the centuries-long run of the … Continue reading From Arctic Exceptionalism to Arctic Imperialism? Will America’s Proposed Expansion to Greenland Restore the Arctic as a Zone of Peace, or Usher Forth a New Era of Arctic Imperialism?

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Cornelius Castoriadis and Humor

The polymath Cornelius Castoriadis, while widely recognized today for his serious philosophical and political thought, is also remembered for his engaging personality. He was a dynamic intellectual who stood out –not only for his ideas and his bald head– but also for his lively presence and sharp wit. Humor is what set him apart from many of his contemporaries, the often-serious French intellectuals. Humor is vital and man is a history-making creature… Thus, Castoriadis’s distinctive humor enriched his ideas and played a role in their recognition. His humor and his imagination made Castoriadis a unique thinker. So, why is Castoriadis worth remembering this way too? You will see it in the essay, i.e., Cornelius Castoriadis through the lens and the testimony of Dimitris Eleas.

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Il Gonfaloniere di Giustizia e le banche: un conflitto d’interessi nella Firenze medievale

This short paper outlines how the Florentine office of Gonfaloniere di Giustizia—created in 1293 to guarantee judicial independence—was repeatedly held by leading bankers between the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Using notarial, civic and banking records, it shows that the same families who controlled Europe’s largest banks (Bardi, Peruzzi, Medici, Strozzi) used the magistracy to arbitrate insolvencies, negotiate public debt and shield their private interests. The study highlights the structural risks that arise when financial and judicial powers overlap, drawing a parallel with present-day debates on regulatory capture.

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Modern Studies in Its Twenties: Time to Celebrate

Back in 2005, the Faculty of Law and Social Sciences (now “of Humanities and Social Sciences”) at the University of Akureyri (UNAK) graduated its first cohort in Modern Studies, namely the one and only BA-level degree line in the Humanities (especially Philosophy and History) ever to be offered—and currently still being offered—in the north of … Continue reading Modern Studies in Its Twenties: Time to Celebrate

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