Architecture and Welfare
Scandinavian Perspectives
Contributor(s)
Arrhenius, Thordis (editor)
Braae, Ellen (editor)
Ruud, Guttorm (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
In the decades following World War II, ambitious building programs were launched across Europe to secure social prosperity. Scandinavia, in particular, underwent an intensive phase of modernization aimed at distributing wealth equally. However, developments in Denmark, Sweden, and Norway followed different paths, and their welfare models were modified, contested, and copied over time. This book examines how architecture, once considered a medium for general well-being, inclusion, and political participation, is now often associated with the opposite: alienation, exclusion, and segregation. The volume offers new perspectives on the history and redesign of post-war architecture and urbanity.
Keywords
Sweden; Norway; Denmark; Finland; public space; social housing; Norwegian cabins; playgrounds; junkyard playgrounds; theory of welfare; welfare city; welfare landscapes; Catherine BauerDOI
10.1515/9783035627992ISBN
9783035627992, 9783035627961, 9783035627992Publisher
De GruyterPublisher website
https://www.degruyter.com/Publication date and place
Berlin/Boston, 2025Imprint
BirkhäuserClassification
Architecture: residential and domestic buildings
Social services and welfare, criminology