Sneskred og permafrost ved Inatsisartut- og kommunalvalgene i Grønland
Inatsisartutvalget i marts 2025 blev afholdt under uhørt stor medieopmærksomhed og blev døbt sneskredsvalget, da mange mandater blev flyttet. Demokraatit blev for første gang det største parti og kunne efterfølgende danne en storkoalition med IA, Siumut og Atassut. Det næststørste parti, Naleraq, bl…
Inatsisartutvalget i marts 2025 blev afholdt under uhørt stor medieopmærksomhed og blev døbt sneskredsvalget, da mange mandater blev flyttet. Demokraatit blev for første gang det største parti og kunne efterfølgende danne en storkoalition med IA, Siumut og Atassut. Det næststørste parti, Naleraq, blev dermed det eneste oppositionsparti. Få uger efter gik de grønlandske vælgere igen til stemmeurnerne ved de fem kommunalvalg. Denne artikel analyserer valgene og diskuterer de store vælgervandringer (sneskred), og hvorfor nogle emner og partivalg stadig ligger som et permafrostlag under grønlandsk politik.
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Editor:
Uffe Wilken
Year:
2025
Subjects:
Grønland; Valg
Title of journal:
Tidsskriftet Grønland
Volume of journal:
73
Number of journal:
4
Publisher:
Det Grønlandske Selskab
Country of publication:
Danmark
ISSN number:
0017-4556
Greenland is a self-governing part of the Danish realm with an institutional system in transition from colonisation to further independence. Greenlandic governance institutions currently represent a mix of Greenlandic and Danish governance systems rooted in the Danish constitution and a Scandinavian…
Greenland is a self-governing part of the Danish realm with an institutional system in transition from colonisation to further independence. Greenlandic governance institutions currently represent a mix of Greenlandic and Danish governance systems rooted in the Danish constitution and a Scandinavian universal welfare model. Denmark and other Nordic countries with similar governance systems and welfare models have high levels of generalised trust strongly correlated with institutional trust. No research has however been carried out in Greenland regarding generalised or institutional trust and their correlates – a research gap which this article seeks to remedy. The study is based on data from the Greenland Perspectives survey of 2018 and finds that generalised trust in Greenland is significantly different from the Danish average and the levels of other Nordic countries. Institutional trust positively and significantly correlates with generalised trust in line with theories of institutional trust as a driver of generalised trust. Greenlandic identity is negatively correlated with generalised trust contrary to theories of identity and majority/minority dynamics. The correlations between generalised trust, institutional trust, and identity are surprisingly not confounded by education or income, contrary to success and well-being theories of generalised trust. The study concludes that institutions and identity clearly matter, but in a different way than theories predict. The results raise an important question for further research of how institutions and identity come to matter in Greenland – especially how institutional quality is created under the complex bureaucratic and social conditions of the post-colonial microstate.
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Year:
2024
Subjects:
Generalised trust; Institutional trust; Identity; Decolonisation; Microstates
Title of journal:
The Polar Journal
Volume of journal:
14
Number of journal:
1
Publisher:
Routledge
ISSN number:
2154-896X
DOI number:
10.1080/2154896X.2024.2342108
Innuttaasunik ataatsimiititsinerit marluk - assigiingitsupilussuit. To borgermøder - to planeter
Year:
2024
Subjects:
Ulighed; Tillid; Den offentlige sektor; Gadeplansbureaukratiets betydning for borgere
Name of newspaper:
Sermitsiaq
Volume & number:
41
Date & year:
11. oktober 2024