About the research group

In this research group we are concerned with key areas within political science. We focus on the relationship between the state and its citizens, especially the exercise of state power and the justifications thereof. We study how legal strategies are used as political tools (lawfare) to advance goals such as children's and migrants' rights, health, and sustainable development goals. We examine the normative fundament for the welfare state and the backlash on key democratic rights across the globe. We analyze discretion in the judiciary and amongst frontline professionals in welfare states, and the role and impact of paternalism. Some key research themes include how governmental institutions and its decision makers function in society; how law shapes societies and if and how rights and courts are tools for social change; and what affects the population's views on core institutions - national and supra-national - and their outputs. 

Our current projects collect data from all regions of the world, with an emphasis on Europe, the Americas and Africa.

Research profile

Many government decisions are of a paternalistic nature, as well as discretionary. Such state intervention is often justified with references to the common good, or that certain services or limitations on personal freedom are in the best interest of the individual. State decisions on the best interest of a child is an example of such discretionary and paternalistic intervention. In the area of child protection in particular, the government has the power to forcefully intervene into the private lives of its citizens, and to decide what is in their best interest. The families and cases are never the exact same - making discretionary reasoning necessary. Child protection is a particular focus of the research group. Understanding how professionals in different states decide what is in the best interest of a child is essential for understanding mechanisms of both discretion and paternalism. By examining how decisions regarding the child's best interest are made, DIPA aims to unlock the black hole of discretion in the welfare state. 

In democratic states, protection of rights, trust in institutions and a functioning legal system, are key components. This research group is concerned with questions regarding these components within countries and across countries. Key research themes are legitimacy and strategies of legitimacy, policy making and implementing, decision-making, discretion and paternalism, citizens' opinions and trust of the state, political participation, social and political mobilization, and consequences og globalization. Empirical research areas are child protection services, children's rights, rule of law and courts, the welfare state, welfare services and different welfare systems, human rights, and health and social policies. 

The research group has long experience with comparative studies, and we often combine various research methods and data. Data material often consist of decision makers, citizens, laws and rules, judicial decisions, public documents and public expressions. Research methods used are among other interviews, observations, text analysis, surveys and survey experiments. Project associated with the research group gather data from Europe, Africa and the Americas. 

People

Group manager
Group members