General description
The lecture course provides social scientific perspectives on consumption from the fields of economic sociology, sociology and social psychology. The course is intended for both MA and PhD level students at the universities of Tampere, Turku and Jyväskylä.
Teachers:
Atte Oksanen (UTA)
Markus Kaakinen (UTA)
Lecturers:
Dr. Minna Autio (HU), Prof. Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen (UTA), Dr. Taru Lindblom (UTU), Prof. Atte Oksanen (UTA), Prof. Semi Purhonen (UTA), Prof. Olli Pyyhtinen (UTA), Dr. Mette Ranta (JYU), Prof. Pekka Räsänen (UTU) & Prof. Terhi-Anna Wilska (JYU)
19.10. at 12–16, Linna 5026–5027
Course opening: practical details (Atte Oksanen)
Pekka Räsänen: Consumption from the perspective of economic sociology
Taru Lindblom: Food consumption, status struggle and economic inequality
26.10. at 12–16, Linna Linna 5026–5027
Atte Oksanen: Debt problems and life-course transitions
Mette Ranta: Towards youth financial independence: Psychological and societal factors
2.11. at 12–16, Linna 4013
Minna Autio: Sustainability in consumption: goods, services and innovations
Semi Purhonen: Cultural stratification: Starting points and recent debates
9.11. at 12–16, Linna 5026–5027
Terhi-Anna Wilska: Consumption, necessities and excess
Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen & Olli Pyyhtinen: Consumption and waste
Details
Lectures are in Tampere and available as videos for students of Jyväskylä and Turku Universities.
Requirements for 5 ECTS
1) Lecture diaries in English or in Finnish (max 300 words/lecture, in total 2400 words)
2) Essays (max 3000 words including a reference list). Each lecture will include additional reading package (i.e. scientific articles). At least 3 articles should be used in the essay.
DL 25.11 (lecture diaries) & 9.12. (essays)
Lectures are in Tampere and available as videos for students of Jyväskylä and Turku Universities. Enrollment by sending email to markus.kaakinen@uta.fi
The forms of violence in civil wars are quite often more intensified and fatal than in traditional wars among states. Violence is present within the whole society and divides it into antagonist camps. Returning to peace after bloody civil war is therefore also more painful and complex. It takes time to recover from civil wars since the wounds are deeply engrained in the society and they dominate every day experiences among people. This course focuses on the ways to end violence after civil war and build up sustainable and just peace, ways to heal collective and individual trauma and reconstruct destroyed community but also damaged environment. The course examines from various thematic, but also disciplinary perspectives, challenges and obstacles of returning to peace after civil war. It is focused mostly on Finnish Civil War (1917), Irish civil wars and Middle Eastern cases. It offers multi- and inter-disciplinary focus by combining psychological, historical, peace studies and legal approaches.
Themes:
1) Mediation & peace processes
2) Reconciliation, trauma and remembering
3) Transitional justice & reconstruction
4) Refugees and forced displacement
Schedule:
16.1.2017 Marko Lehti (UTA): Introduction
19.1.2017 Pertti Haapala (History, UTA) –”From Chaos to Compromise. The Civil War 1918 and its aftermath in Finland”
23.1.2016 Jyrki Ruohomäki (TAPRI, UTA): “The politics of memory and re-membering in post-conflict Northern Ireland”
26.1.2017 Anne Heimo (University of Turku): “Coping with the Past: The 1918 Finnish Civil War”
30.1.2017 Jukka Kekkonen (University of Helsinki): “Political and legal repression after Finnish and Spanish civil wars. A comparative analysis.”
2.2.2017 Elise Feron (TAPRI, UTA) "Northern Ireland: Peace without Reconciliation?"
6.2.2017 Laura Huttunen (anthropology, UTA): "Missing persons and the transition to peace: Bosnia-Herzegovina and beyond"
9.2.2017 Tanja Tamminen (IOS, Germany): ”Kosovo – from dialogue to reconciliation”
13.2.2017 Roland Kostic: “Transitional Justice and Reconciliation in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Examining top-down approaches and bottom up response”
15.2.2017 Susanne Dahlgren (anthropology, UTA): “ Reconstruction of civil society after violent civil war: the case of Yemen”
20.2.2017 Anitta Kynsilehto (TAPRI): "Fleeing civil war: Syrians in exile"
23.2.2017 Armenak Tokjman (TAPRI, UTA) “Conflict transformation: examples from Syria”
27.2.2017 Bruno Lefort (TAPRI, UTA/ Montreal) “After Lebanese Civil war” (Skype lecture)
2.3.2017 Karim Maiche (TAPRI) “Partial Amnesty and the Confidence-Building in Post-Civil War Algeria”
6.3.2017 Raija-Leena Punamäki: “Traumatic war experiences and possibility of reconciliation: psychological aspects.”
9.3.2017 Aleksi Ylönen (Lisbon): "South Sudan: Endless Instability?"
13.3.2017. Frank Möller (TAPRI, UTA) Children of Rwanda
16.3.2017 Eeva Puumala (TAPRI): ”Refugees and asylum seekers: experiencing civil war from a distance”.
20.3.2017 Mahdi Abdile: “From democracy to perpetual chaos and improvement: The case of Somalia”
The course will take place on Mondays and Thursdays at 12-14, except:
Monday 30 January at 16-18
Monday 27 February at 16-18.
Wednesday 15.2.2017 at 12-14
Lectures 38h, literature given by lecturers and student workshops chaired by TAPRI phd-students.
Student write a lecture diary on the basis of lectures and given material.
Students participate to dialogic workshops (4 sessions, 2 hours each) facilitated by TAPRI’s PhD students in which target orientated questions are given beforehand and joint concluding statement are written jointly.
Course: open for all students but targeted specially for students at Faculty of Social Sciences.
Compensations:
Degree Programme in Social Sciences: SOSM7
Degree Programme in Politics (International Relations): POLKVS33 Peace and Conflict Research
The forms of violence in civil wars are quite often more intensified and fatal than in traditional wars among states. Violence is present within the whole society and divides it into antagonist camps. Returning to peace after bloody civil war is therefore also more painful and complex. It takes time to recover from civil wars since the wounds are deeply engrained in the society and they dominate every day experiences among people. This course focuses on the ways to end violence after civil war and build up sustainable and just peace, ways to heal collective and individual trauma and reconstruct destroyed community but also damaged environment. The course examines from various thematic, but also disciplinary perspectives, challenges and obstacles of returning to peace after civil war. It is focused mostly on Finnish Civil War (1917), Irish civil wars and Middle Eastern cases. It offers multi- and inter-disciplinary focus by combining psychological, historical, peace studies and legal approaches.
Themes:
1) Mediation & peace processes
2) Reconciliation, trauma and remembering
3) Transitional justice & reconstruction
4) Refugees and forced displacement
Schedule:
16.1.2017 Marko Lehti (UTA): Introduction
19.1.2017 Pertti Haapala (History, UTA) –”From Chaos to Compromise. The Civil War 1918 and its aftermath in Finland”
23.1.2016 Jyrki Ruohomäki (TAPRI, UTA): “The politics of memory and re-membering in post-conflict Northern Ireland”
26.1.2017 Anne Heimo (University of Turku): “Coping with the Past: The 1918 Finnish Civil War”
30.1.2017 Jukka Kekkonen (University of Helsinki): “Political and legal repression after Finnish and Spanish civil wars. A comparative analysis.”
2.2.2017 Elise Feron (TAPRI, UTA) "Northern Ireland: Peace without Reconciliation?"
6.2.2017 Laura Huttunen (anthropology, UTA): "Missing persons and the transition to peace: Bosnia-Herzegovina and beyond"
9.2.2017 Tanja Tamminen (IOS, Germany): ”Kosovo – from dialogue to reconciliation”
13.2.2017 Roland Kostic: “Transitional Justice and Reconciliation in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Examining top-down approaches and bottom up response”
15.2.2017 Susanne Dahlgren (anthropology, UTA): “ Reconstruction of civil society after violent civil war: the case of Yemen”
20.2.2017 Anitta Kynsilehto (TAPRI): "Fleeing civil war: Syrians in exile"
23.2.2017 Armenak Tokjman (TAPRI, UTA) “Conflict transformation: examples from Syria”
27.2.2017 Bruno Lefort (TAPRI, UTA/ Montreal) “After Lebanese Civil war” (Skype lecture)
2.3.2017 Karim Maiche (TAPRI) “Partial Amnesty and the Confidence-Building in Post-Civil War Algeria”
6.3.2017 Raija-Leena Punamäki: “Traumatic war experiences and possibility of reconciliation: psychological aspects.”
9.3.2017 Aleksi Ylönen (Lisbon): "South Sudan: Endless Instability?"
13.3.2017. Frank Möller (TAPRI, UTA) Children of Rwanda
16.3.2017 Eeva Puumala (TAPRI): ”Refugees and asylum seekers: experiencing civil war from a distance”.
20.3.2017 Mahdi Abdile: “From democracy to perpetual chaos and improvement: The case of Somalia”
The course will take place on Mondays and Thursdays at 12-14, except:
Monday 30 January at 16-18
Monday 27 February at 16-18.
Wednesday 15.2.2017 at 12-14
Lectures 38h, literature given by lecturers and student workshops chaired by TAPRI phd-students.
Student write a lecture diary on the basis of lectures and given material.
Students participate to dialogic workshops (4 sessions, 2 hours each) facilitated by TAPRI’s PhD students in which target orientated questions are given beforehand and joint concluding statement are written jointly.
Course: open for all students but targeted specially for students at Faculty of Social Sciences.
Compensations:
Degree Programme in Social Sciences: SOSM7
Degree Programme in Politics (International Relations): POLKVS33 Peace and Conflict Research