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Trust and control in guest-host relationships

By annika [dot] persson [at] ses [dot] lu [dot] se (Annika Persson) - published 21 February 2025 Photo: Jon Tyson, Unsplash.com A new doctoral thesis by Aurimas Pumputis explores how trust and control function between guests and hosts on peer-to-peer platforms like Airbnb. The study focuses on how these relationships are shaped in digital environments and how platforms use information technology t

https://www.ses.lu.se/en/article/trust-and-control-guest-host-relationships - 2025-03-09

Interview with our researcher Filippa Säwe

Published 9 January 2015 On January 7, you could read an article about one of our researchers, Fillipa Säwe, in the newspaper "Hallå". Here Filippa talks about her research that is focused on the small scale fisheries in Öresund. She also reveals that she in fact does not fisch her self and she tells the story of how she ended up at the Department of Service Management and Service Studies. Erlier

https://www.ses.lu.se/en/article/interview-our-researcher-filippa-sawe - 2025-03-09

Six times more expensive to travel by car than by bicycle: study

Published 13 May 2015 Photo: Lasse Strandberg It is six times more expensive for society – and for you individually - if you travel by car instead of cycling. This has been shown in a Department of Service Management and Service Management study of Copenhagen, a city of cyclists. It is the first time a price has been put on car use as compared to cycling.  In the comparative study, Stefan Gössling

https://www.ses.lu.se/en/article/six-times-more-expensive-travel-car-bicycle-study - 2025-03-09

Mona Hemmaty has defended her thesis

Published 26 April 2019 Mona Hemmaty at the Department of Sociology has defended her doctoral thesis in sociology ”On the Margins. Migrants, Status Mobility and Recent Turns in Swedish Migration Politics” today, 26 April at 10:15 in the Kulturen Auditorium in Lund. Discussant: Associate Professor Blanca Garcés-Mascareñas, Barcelona Centre for International AffairsAbstractMany people believe that c

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/mona-hemmaty-has-defended-her-thesis - 2025-03-09

Immigrants' humorous play with ethnic stereotypes can have a bonding effect

Published 29 April 2019 Henriette Frees Esholdt has written the article "Virgins, Terrorists, and Ten Children: Immigrants' Humorous Play with Ethnic Stereotypes in Bonding with Danes in the Workplace" published in the journal Symbolic Interaction. The article explores immigrants' self‐directed ethnic humor in collegial relationships drawing on fieldwork in a multi‐ethnic workplace, an industrial

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/immigrants-humorous-play-ethnic-stereotypes-can-have-bonding-effect - 2025-03-09

Matthias Abelin has defended his thesis

Published 10 May 2019 Matthias Abelin at the Department of Sociology has defended his doctoral thesis in social anthropology ”A Swedish Dilemma: Culture and Rule of Law in Swedish Sickness Insurance” today, Friday 10th May at 10:00 in the Eden Auditorium in Lund. Swedish society has been described as both modern, liberal democratic and deeply humanitarian; and as more or less premodern, semi-autho

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/matthias-abelin-has-defended-his-thesis - 2025-03-09

New student association starts out by addressing surveillance capitalism

By theo [dot] hagman-rogowski [at] soclaw [dot] lu [dot] se (Theo Hagman Rogowski) - published 16 May 2019 Doxa, a new student association at the Department of Sociology, hosted their first public event on 14th May. A panel discussion featuring researchers from Lund University and Denmark covered the implications of surveillance capitalism, a phenomenon expected to grow extensively in just a few y

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/new-student-association-starts-out-addressing-surveillance-capitalism - 2025-03-09

The Department of Sociology gets new address

Published 2 July 2019 The building is the same, but the address has changed. From 1 July the Department of Sociology's address is Sandgatan 11. To make it easier for emergency services to find the right building in the Paradis area in Lund, several university buildings are changing addresses. On 1 July, the Department of Sociology's address was changed from Paradisgatan 5 to Sandgatan 11, with ent

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/department-sociology-gets-new-address - 2025-03-09

How bars and nightclubs make you drink more

Published 16 August 2019 Sébastien Tutenges has studied overt and covert techniques used in bars and nightclubs to sell more alcohol, and noticed that they are most prevalent in low-priced venues with young patrons. Other than obvious methods to increase drinking – alcohol advertisements, special offers like Happy Hour, and large pitchers or shot glasses which speeds up consumption – bartenders ca

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/how-bars-and-nightclubs-make-you-drink-more - 2025-03-09

Comprehensive work on collective bargaining in the EU

Published 19 August 2019 Professor Anders Kjellberg has contributed to “Collective bargaining in Europe: towards an endgame”, a four-volume collection covering collective bargaining in EU member states since the year 2000. The literature explores how collective bargaining has been weakend or significantly changed in all 28 EU states. The main policy issue addressed by the authors is how the trend

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/comprehensive-work-collective-bargaining-eu - 2025-03-09

The British strategy of dividing Cyprus ultimately enabled its independence

Published 10 September 2019 The events leading up to Cyprus gaining independence from Great Britain in 1960 were not the result of instrumental rational calculations, argues sociologist Chares Demetriou in a recently published paper. Instead, a complicated series of interactions between several actors clouded the colonizer's judgement, ultimately leading to the inadvertent independence of Cyprus.

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/british-strategy-dividing-cyprus-ultimately-enabled-its-independence - 2025-03-09

Anna Berglund successfully defends her doctoral thesis

Published 4 October 2019 Anna Berglund at the Department of Sociology defended her doctoral thesis in social anthropology ”Ambiguous hopes: an ethnographic study of agricultural modernisation in a Rwandan village” on Friday 4th October. For her PhD project, Anna Berglund spent 13 months in a Rwandan village studying the consequences of agricultural modernization policies. The Rwandan government ha

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/anna-berglund-successfully-defends-her-doctoral-thesis - 2025-03-09

Henrik Möller defends his doctoral thesis

Published 16 December 2019 It could have been a Friday the 13th disaster, but Henrik Möller managed to dodge all bad luck and successfully defended his doctoral thesis ”SPECTRAL MATTER: Materiality, Economy, and Culture of Burmese Jade in Contemporary China” on December 13. Henrik Möller states that his research project “examines intersections of material, economic and cultural aspects of carving,

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/henrik-moller-defends-his-doctoral-thesis - 2025-03-09

Focusing on the seduction of crime, deviance, and control

By theo [dot] hagman-rogowski [at] soclaw [dot] lu [dot] se (Theo Hagman Rogowski) - published 20 December 2019 With only a few weeks remaining of its first semester, the maiden voyage of the Master’s program in Cultural Criminology at Lund University is ending. How does this unique criminology master’s program provides nuance to deviance? “I have found the course to be fantastic so far,” says Jac

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/focusing-seduction-crime-deviance-and-control - 2025-03-09

Marriage-squeezed men in China suffer social discrimination

Published 14 January 2020 Lisa Eklund has co-authored the article ”Reacting to social discrimination? Men's individual and social risk behaviors in the context of a male marriage squeeze in rural China”, published in Social Science & Medicine. In China, a shortage of marriageable women is resulting in many single men, some of which engage in risky and potentially hazardous activities. The study by

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/marriage-squeezed-men-china-suffer-social-discrimination - 2025-03-09

Folk methods to deal with inaccessibility

Published 19 February 2020 Declarations and policies drafted by the UN, EU and individual nations basically promise accessibility for people with disabilities. But rhetoric is one thing, practice another. Disabled people have to use creative ways to access many places or resources in their everyday life. The sociologist David Wästerfors has studied what people with various disabilities do to manag

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/folk-methods-deal-inaccessibility - 2025-03-09

Uncovering the obscure emotional labour of law practitioners

Published 17 March 2020 In a new book, sociologist Lisa Flower shows how lawyers manage their emotions in the courtroom, where emotional displays traditionally are unwelcomed. People practicing and studying law often ignore the role emotions play in court. The idea is that feelings disturb the rationality that is the judicial discipline’s foundation. Neglecting emotions will, if nothing else, make

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/uncovering-obscure-emotional-labour-law-practitioners - 2025-03-09

Antoinette Hetzler Featured in International Anthology on Violence Prevention in School

Published 24 March 2020 Professor Antoinette Hetzler has contributed to the anthology Feeling Safe in School: Bullying and Violence Prevention Around the World, published by Harvard Education Press. Professor Hetzler’s expertise concerns conflicts in Swedish schools. In her chapter “Abusive Behaviour in Swedish Schools: Setting Limits and Building Citizenship” she writes:“Sweden has gone further t

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/antoinette-hetzler-featured-international-anthology-violence-prevention-school - 2025-03-09

Survival advantages for people who trust strangers

Published 15 April 2020 People who trust others are less likely to die than those who are distrusting, conclude sociologist Jan Mewes and colleagues in “Trust, happiness and mortality: Findings from a prospective US population-based survey”, published in Social Science & Medicine. The effects of generalised trust - the belief that others, including strangers, can be trusted – were specifically not

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/survival-advantages-people-who-trust-strangers - 2025-03-09

Ethnic minority youths’ experiences of the police

Published 27 April 2020 Veronika Burcar Alm has co-authored the article ”Suspected or protected? Perceptions of procedural justice in ethnic minority youth's descriptions of police relations” published in Policing and Society. The researchers interviewed 121 ethnic minority youths living in Finland, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, about their experiences with police practices. The young people say th

https://www.soc.lu.se/en/article/ethnic-minority-youths-experiences-police - 2025-03-09