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Language skills
required
Programme length
Full time study for two academic years.
Study mode
Face-to-face learning
Application status
International students:
Students with Icelandic or Nordic citizenship:
Overview

  • Are you interested in the issues facing modern societies?
  • Do you want to acquire theoretical knowledge and understanding of social institutions and conditions?
  • Do you want a graduate programme that is both academic and practical?
  • Do you enjoy making observations about society?

The MA in sociology offers several specialisations, allowing students to choose between a more theoretical or more practical programme. All MA programmes prepare students for doctoral studies in the social sciences or related fields, including programmes abroad. UI also offers shorter diploma programmes in certain subjects.

Programme structure

The programme is 120 ECTS and is organised as two years of full-time study.

The programme is made up of

  • Mandatory courses, 35 - 55 ECTS
  • Restricted electives, 10 - 30 ECTS
  • Free electives, 5-52 ECTS
  • Master's thesis, 30-60 ECTS

Specialisations

Students may choose between the following specialisations:

  • Sociology
  • Methodology
  • Criminology and society
  • Health and wellbeing

Organisation of teaching

This programme is taught in English and most textbooks are in English.

Main objectives

A degree in sociology provides basic training in academic approaches and working practices. Students also learn to work independently.

Other

Completing the programme allows a student to apply for doctoral studies.

BA, B.Ed, BS degree with First Class grades or equivalent. All international applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to provide results of the TOEFL (79) or IELTS (6.5) tests as evidence of English proficiency.

Students not holding a BA degree in Sociology are required to take three undergraduate courses in Sociology or have completed equivalent courses: FÉL204G Methodology: Social Science Research Methods., FÉL306G Statistics I: Introduction and a course in Sociological Theory in parallel with MA studies. The undergraduate courses are taught in Icelandic.

A two year master’s programme in Sociology. 120 ECTS credits have to be completed for the qualification. All teaching is in English, but elective courses in other departments might be taught in Icelandic.
The program is build up in the following way: mandatory courses (40 ECTS), restricted electives courses (30 ECTS), and elective courses (20 ECTS) within the faculty of Sociology, Antropology, and Folkloristics or, upon joint decisions, in other departments within the University of Iceland. The MA Sociology program is completed by a 30 ECTS MA thesis. On request it is possible to complete the MA Sociology program by a 60 ECTS MA thesis and subsequently reducing restrictive elective/elective courses by 30 ECTS. 
Upon preference students can specialise in one of the following fields: Health and Welfare, Criminology and Society, or Methodology in Social Sciences. Mandatory courses are then 60 ECTS, restricted electives 10 ECTS and elective courses 10 ECTS.

The following documents must accompany an application for this programme:
  • CV
  • Statement of purpose
  • Reference 1, Name and email
  • Reference 2, Name and email
  • Certified copies of diplomas and transcripts
  • Proof of English proficiency

Further information on supporting documents can be found here

Programme structure

Check below to see how the programme is structured.

First year | Fall
Crime and Social Deviance (FÉL0A1F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
First year | Fall
Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey (FÉL302F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
First year | Fall
Social research methods (FÉL301F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Theories in Social and human Sciences (FMÞ102F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
First year | Spring 1
Sexual Violence, Law and Justice (FÉL601M)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Spring 1
Crime in Iceland (FÉL0A4F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
First year | Spring 1
Criminal Justice and Policing (FÉL007F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
First year | Spring 1
Regression analysis (FMÞ501M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Second year | Spring 1
Sexual Violence, Law and Justice (FÉL601M)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Crime in Iceland (FÉL0A4F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Second year | Spring 1
Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile (FÉL429F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Whole year courses
Mentor in Sprettur (GKY001M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

See the digital application form. 

More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life (FÉL701F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland (ÞJÓ063M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Taught in August 2022

An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

 

Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories in Museum Studies (SAF002F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals (ÞJÓ110F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

Aim

The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. (MAN018F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

Language of instruction: English
Self-study
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Managing Cultural Institutions (SAF027F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Environmental anthropology (MAN509M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Museum! (SAF016F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Missing

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Anthropology of art (MAN0A6F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

Language of instruction: English
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future (MAN0A7F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

Language of instruction: English
Year unspecified | Fall
Globalization (MAN095F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

 The course is taught in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ506M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Performance Studies (ÞJÓ107F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies (FFR102F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
The Life Span, Self and Society (FFR302M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
General Gender Studies (KYN101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Global health (MAN0A3F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL090F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Old Nordic Religion and Belief (ÞJÓ203F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

Teaching format

  • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies (SAF018M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Urban Anthropology (MAN507M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses (MAN0A8F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Multicultural society and migration (MAN017F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research (FMÞ201F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Project design, monitoring and evaluation (MAN701F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Disability in Contemporary Culture (FFR102M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Studies for Practical Purposes (KYN202F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Food and culture (NÆR613M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? (SAF603M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ022M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Theories in Gender Studies (KYN211F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Queer Studies (KYN212F)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Global health (MAN603F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender and Folklore (ÞJÓ021M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL009F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL091F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
First year | Fall
Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification (FÉL501M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey (FÉL302F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
First year | Fall
Social research methods (FÉL301F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Theories in Social and human Sciences (FMÞ102F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
First year | Spring 1
Globalization (FÉL0A5F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
First year | Spring 1
Health and Inequality (FÉL098F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
First year | Spring 1
(In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries (FÉL213F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

 In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
First year | Spring 1
Regression analysis (FMÞ501M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Second year | Fall
Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification (FÉL501M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Second year | Spring 1
Globalization (FÉL0A5F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Second year | Spring 1
(In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries (FÉL213F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

 In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile (FÉL429F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Whole year courses
Mentor in Sprettur (GKY001M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

See the digital application form. 

More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Crime and Social Deviance (FÉL0A1F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life (FÉL701F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland (ÞJÓ063M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Taught in August 2022

An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

 

Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories in Museum Studies (SAF002F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals (ÞJÓ110F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

Aim

The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. (MAN018F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

Language of instruction: English
Self-study
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Managing Cultural Institutions (SAF027F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Environmental anthropology (MAN509M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Museum! (SAF016F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Missing

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Anthropology of art (MAN0A6F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

Language of instruction: English
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future (MAN0A7F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

Language of instruction: English
Year unspecified | Fall
Globalization (MAN095F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

 The course is taught in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ506M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Performance Studies (ÞJÓ107F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies (FFR102F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
The Life Span, Self and Society (FFR302M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
General Gender Studies (KYN101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Global health (MAN0A3F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL090F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Old Nordic Religion and Belief (ÞJÓ203F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

Teaching format

  • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies (SAF018M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Urban Anthropology (MAN507M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses (MAN0A8F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Multicultural society and migration (MAN017F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research (FMÞ201F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Project design, monitoring and evaluation (MAN701F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Disability in Contemporary Culture (FFR102M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Studies for Practical Purposes (KYN202F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Food and culture (NÆR613M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? (SAF603M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ022M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Theories in Gender Studies (KYN211F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Queer Studies (KYN212F)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Global health (MAN603F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender and Folklore (ÞJÓ021M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL009F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL091F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
First year | Fall
Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey (FÉL302F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
First year | Fall
Social research methods (FÉL301F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Theories in Social and human Sciences (FMÞ102F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
First year | Spring 1
Survey research methods (FÉL089F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

This course is taught every other year.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Spring 1
Regression analysis (FMÞ501M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Second year | Spring 1
Survey research methods (FÉL089F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

This course is taught every other year.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile (FÉL429F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Whole year courses
Mentor in Sprettur (GKY001M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

See the digital application form. 

More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Crime and Social Deviance (FÉL0A1F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Applied regression project (FÉL018M)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Self-study
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life (FÉL701F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland (ÞJÓ063M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Taught in August 2022

An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

 

Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories in Museum Studies (SAF002F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals (ÞJÓ110F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

Aim

The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. (MAN018F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

Language of instruction: English
Self-study
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Managing Cultural Institutions (SAF027F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Environmental anthropology (MAN509M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Museum! (SAF016F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Missing

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Anthropology of art (MAN0A6F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

Language of instruction: English
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future (MAN0A7F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

Language of instruction: English
Year unspecified | Fall
Globalization (MAN095F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

 The course is taught in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ506M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Performance Studies (ÞJÓ107F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies (FFR102F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
The Life Span, Self and Society (FFR302M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
General Gender Studies (KYN101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Global health (MAN0A3F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL090F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Criminal Justice and Policing (FÉL007F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Health and Inequality (FÉL098F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Applied regression project (FÉL018M)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Self-study
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
(In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries (FÉL213F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

 In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Self-study
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Globalization (FÉL0A5F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Self-study
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Crime in Iceland (FÉL0A4F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Old Nordic Religion and Belief (ÞJÓ203F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

Teaching format

  • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies (SAF018M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Urban Anthropology (MAN507M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses (MAN0A8F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Multicultural society and migration (MAN017F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research (FMÞ201F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Project design, monitoring and evaluation (MAN701F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Disability in Contemporary Culture (FFR102M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Studies for Practical Purposes (KYN202F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Food and culture (NÆR613M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? (SAF603M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ022M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Theories in Gender Studies (KYN211F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Queer Studies (KYN212F)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Global health (MAN603F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender and Folklore (ÞJÓ021M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL009F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL091F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey (FÉL302F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
First year | Fall
Social research methods (FÉL301F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
Theories in Social and human Sciences (FMÞ102F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
First year | Spring 1
Regression analysis (FOM601M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
First year | Spring 1
Regression analysis (FMÞ501M)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile (FÉL429F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Year unspecified
MA Thesis in Sociology (FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0/0/0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

MA thesis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Whole year courses
Mentor in Sprettur (GKY001M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

See the digital application form. 

More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification (FÉL501M)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Crime and Social Deviance (FÉL0A1F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Environmental Anthropology (MAN508M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life (FÉL701F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland (ÞJÓ063M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Taught in August 2022

An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

 

Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories in Museum Studies (SAF002F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals (ÞJÓ110F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

Aim

The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. (MAN018F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

Language of instruction: English
Self-study
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Managing Cultural Institutions (SAF027F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
Environmental anthropology (MAN509M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Museum! (SAF016F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Missing

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Anthropology of art (MAN0A6F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

Language of instruction: English
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future (MAN0A7F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

Language of instruction: English
Year unspecified | Fall
Globalization (MAN095F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

 The course is taught in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ506M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Performance Studies (ÞJÓ107F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies (FFR102F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
The Life Span, Self and Society (FFR302M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Year unspecified | Fall
General Gender Studies (KYN101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Global health (MAN0A3F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL090F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
(In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries (FÉL213F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

 In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Sexual Violence, Law and Justice (FÉL601M)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Globalization (FÉL0A5F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Crime in Iceland (FÉL0A4F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Survey research methods (FÉL089F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

This course is taught every other year.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Criminal Justice and Policing (FÉL007F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Regression methods 2: Analysis of ordinal and nominal dependent variables. (FOM006F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course we cover regression methods where the dependent variable is dichotomous (binary logistic regression) ordinal (ordinal regression) or multinomial. The courses emphasize application in social sciences. Students should have completed FOM401M Regression 1 that addresses assumptions and application of linear regression.  In this course we start with review of basic descriptive statistics and inferential statistics for categorical and ordinal variables. Bivariate and multivariate cross tables, percent, probabilities, ratios, odds ratios, and proportions, measures of association and chi-square test of independence.  Then we address in some details binary logistics regression with emphasize of interpreting regression coefficients. The binary logistic regression method is then extended to ordinal regression.  Then we extend the binary logistic regression method to multinomial regression. We address methods to work with different and complex sample design with and without sample weights. We will address multilevel regression methods. We will both use SPSS and R statistical packages.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Health and Inequality (FÉL098F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Applied regression project (FÉL018M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Self-study
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Fashion and Apparel: Theories and Analysis of Material Culture in an Industrialized Market Society (ÞJÓ606M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course focuses on fashion as a manifestation of material culture resulting from the behavior of individuals in society. Students investigate theories on fashion in industrialized market-economies, while considering various theories in philosophy, sociology, ethnology and anthropology. Concepts of influential factors in the development of apparel fashions will be critically reviewed and analyzed with a view toward students’ local community. The relationship of fashion development to different demographics, specifically in terms of gender, class, sexuality, age, and other significant demographics of social differentiation will be especially noted. An investigation into the “spirit of our time” (the “Zeitgeist”), and a field-study on the fashions of specific groups or locations will be conducted. These lead to a consideration of findings in the light of the theories presented. The investigations and discussions all lead to a final project resulting in a definition and analysis of the development and nature of current fashions as well as a formal forecast of future fashions and fashion–culture.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Self-study
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Old Nordic Religion and Belief (ÞJÓ203F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

Teaching format

  • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies (SAF018M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Urban Anthropology (MAN507M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses (MAN0A8F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Multicultural society and migration (MAN017F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research (FMÞ201F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Project design, monitoring and evaluation (MAN701F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Disability in Contemporary Culture (FFR102M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Studies for Practical Purposes (KYN202F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Food and culture (NÆR613M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? (SAF603M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ022M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Theories in Gender Studies (KYN211F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Queer Studies (KYN212F)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Global health (MAN603F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender and Folklore (ÞJÓ021M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL009F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Reading Course in Sociology (FÉL091F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
First year
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course.
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum!
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death?
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Second year
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course.
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum!
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death?
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course.
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum!
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death?
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
First year
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Second year
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
First year
  • Fall
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Second year
  • Fall
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
First year
  • Fall
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FOM601M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN508M
    Environmental Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FOM006F
    Regression methods 2: Analysis of ordinal and nominal dependent variables. hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course we cover regression methods where the dependent variable is dichotomous (binary logistic regression) ordinal (ordinal regression) or multinomial. The courses emphasize application in social sciences. Students should have completed FOM401M Regression 1 that addresses assumptions and application of linear regression.  In this course we start with review of basic descriptive statistics and inferential statistics for categorical and ordinal variables. Bivariate and multivariate cross tables, percent, probabilities, ratios, odds ratios, and proportions, measures of association and chi-square test of independence.  Then we address in some details binary logistics regression with emphasize of interpreting regression coefficients. The binary logistic regression method is then extended to ordinal regression.  Then we extend the binary logistic regression method to multinomial regression. We address methods to work with different and complex sample design with and without sample weights. We will address multilevel regression methods. We will both use SPSS and R statistical packages.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ606M
    Fashion and Apparel: Theories and Analysis of Material Culture in an Industrialized Market Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on fashion as a manifestation of material culture resulting from the behavior of individuals in society. Students investigate theories on fashion in industrialized market-economies, while considering various theories in philosophy, sociology, ethnology and anthropology. Concepts of influential factors in the development of apparel fashions will be critically reviewed and analyzed with a view toward students’ local community. The relationship of fashion development to different demographics, specifically in terms of gender, class, sexuality, age, and other significant demographics of social differentiation will be especially noted. An investigation into the “spirit of our time” (the “Zeitgeist”), and a field-study on the fashions of specific groups or locations will be conducted. These lead to a consideration of findings in the light of the theories presented. The investigations and discussions all lead to a final project resulting in a definition and analysis of the development and nature of current fashions as well as a formal forecast of future fashions and fashion–culture.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Second year
  • Fall
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FOM601M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN508M
    Environmental Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FOM006F
    Regression methods 2: Analysis of ordinal and nominal dependent variables. hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course we cover regression methods where the dependent variable is dichotomous (binary logistic regression) ordinal (ordinal regression) or multinomial. The courses emphasize application in social sciences. Students should have completed FOM401M Regression 1 that addresses assumptions and application of linear regression.  In this course we start with review of basic descriptive statistics and inferential statistics for categorical and ordinal variables. Bivariate and multivariate cross tables, percent, probabilities, ratios, odds ratios, and proportions, measures of association and chi-square test of independence.  Then we address in some details binary logistics regression with emphasize of interpreting regression coefficients. The binary logistic regression method is then extended to ordinal regression.  Then we extend the binary logistic regression method to multinomial regression. We address methods to work with different and complex sample design with and without sample weights. We will address multilevel regression methods. We will both use SPSS and R statistical packages.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ606M
    Fashion and Apparel: Theories and Analysis of Material Culture in an Industrialized Market Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on fashion as a manifestation of material culture resulting from the behavior of individuals in society. Students investigate theories on fashion in industrialized market-economies, while considering various theories in philosophy, sociology, ethnology and anthropology. Concepts of influential factors in the development of apparel fashions will be critically reviewed and analyzed with a view toward students’ local community. The relationship of fashion development to different demographics, specifically in terms of gender, class, sexuality, age, and other significant demographics of social differentiation will be especially noted. An investigation into the “spirit of our time” (the “Zeitgeist”), and a field-study on the fashions of specific groups or locations will be conducted. These lead to a consideration of findings in the light of the theories presented. The investigations and discussions all lead to a final project resulting in a definition and analysis of the development and nature of current fashions as well as a formal forecast of future fashions and fashion–culture.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • FÉL302F
    Mastering the Master’s level -I: Launching your MA journey hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a general foundation for MA studies in sociology, methodology, and criminology. The department, its faculty, and the wider academic community will be introduced. Students will present their research interests and possible topics for their MA thesis. The assignments in the course will focus on the diversity and hierarchy of academic journals, effective uses of Web of Science and artificial, and critical engagement with research articles. The course will conclude with student submission and oral presentation of a written final assignment.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FÉL301F
    Social research methods hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course has three main objectives. i) that students gain a better understanding of the research process and common methods, ii) that students get training in reading and criticizing existing research, and iii) that students get training in developing research questions with respect to theoretical issues and existing research. Lectures: We discuss concepts and methodologies emphasizing i) the strengths and limitations of various methods, ii) the connections among methodologies, methods, and theoretical issues. Discussion sessions: Students read research articles and discuss research methods in relation to specific sociological topics.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ102F
    Theories in Social and human Sciences hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course covers recent writings and currents of thought that mark, or are likely to mark, turning points in social and cultural theory. Particular care will be taken to situate theories in their historical and social contexts. Attendance to weekly 40 min. discussion classes throughout the course is compulsory. Distance learning students attend in person or via the Internet (with Zoom).

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FOM601M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ501M
    Regression analysis hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a comprehensive course in multiple-regression analysis. The goal of the course is that students develop enough conceptual understanding and practical knowledge to use this method on their own. The lectures cover various regression analysis techniques commonly used in quantitative social research, including control variables, the use of nominal variables, linear and nonlinear models, techniques that test for mediation and statistical interaction effects, and so on. We discuss the assumptions of regression analysis and learn techniques to detect and deal with violations of assumptions. In addition, logistic regression will be introduced, which is a method for a dichotomous dependent variable. We also review many of the basic concepts involved in statistical inference and significance testing. Students get plenty of hands-on experience with data analysis. The instructor hands out survey data that students use to practice the techniques covered in class. The statistical package SPSS will be used.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • FÉL429F
    Mastering the Master’s level II: Navigating the final mile hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The primary objective of the seminar is to provide a dynamic, supportive space for MA students in sociology and criminology to deepen their engagement with their thesis research and encourage reciprocal support among students. Early in the semester, students participate in lightning-round introductions of their research, followed by more detailed presentations as their work progresses. Faculty members, PhD students and other scholars may also be invited to participate in the seminar. This seminar should encourage constructive feedback and collaborative discussions among students and faculty, refine students’ presentation skills, and enhance their professional development and scholarly identity.

    The course is intended for students who have started working on their master's thesis. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Year unspecified
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • FÉL441L, FÉL441L, FÉL441L
    MA Thesis in Sociology hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0/0/0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0/0/0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    MA thesis

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • Whole year courses
  • GKY001M
    Mentor in Sprettur hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, the student's task consists in being a mentor for participants that are upper secondary school students and university students in the project "Sprettur". Mentors' main role is to support and encourage participants in their studies and social life. As well as creating a constructive relationship with the participants, being a positive role model, and participating in events organized in Sprettur. The mentor role centers around building relationships and spending meaningful time together with the commitment to support participants. 

    Sprettur is a project that supports students with an immigrant or refugee background who come from families with little or no university education. The students in this course are mentors of the participants and are paired together based on a common field of interest. Each mentor is responsible for supporting two participants. Mentors plan activities with participants and spend three hours a month (from August to May) with Sprettur’s participants, three hours a month in a study group and attend five seminars that are spread over the school year. Students submit journal entries on Canvas in November and March. Diary entries are based on reading material and students' reflections on the mentorship. Compulsory attendance in events, study groups, and seminars. The course is taught in Icelandic and English. 

    Students must apply for a seat in the course. Applicants go through an interview process and 15-30 students are selected to participate. 

    See the digital application form. 

    More information about Sprettur can be found here: www.hi.is/sprettur  

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Fall
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL501M
    Education, Social Mobility and Social Stratification hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The apple does not fall far from the tree? This course explores how a person’s social background affect the social position they ultimately attain in life and how inequality is reproduced from one generation to the next. The course addresses how social mobility has changed over time and across countries and which role education plays for the process of social mobility. We will discuss the main theories used to explain inequality in education and social mobility and (potential) changes over time. The course will focus on individuals’ social background (social class of origin, parental education or parental socio-economic status) but gender and ethnic inequalities will also be considered in the last meetings. In the seminar, we will read a mix of classic readings and more recent literature. Furthermore, special emphasis will be paid on discussing readings and findings from other countries with respect to the Icelandic country case.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A1F
    Crime and Social Deviance hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers a detailed overview of theories in criminology and sociology of deviance. Students will read empirical research testing these theories in Iceland and elsewhere.

    Different types of crimes and topics will be discussed in criminological/sociological light, such as gender and crime, immigration and crime.

    Emphasis is placed on linking theoretical discussion with empirical research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN508M
    Environmental Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL701F
    The self meets society: Social psychology of everyday life hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Our daily life may seem boringly traditional and predictable. Social psychology shows that it is an exciting and multifaceted phenomenon resting on a complicated interplay of individual factors and social structures. In this course we will use theories and findings by social psychologists to shed light on what is behind the glitter of the obvious. We will go from what is public to the aspects that we conceal and hide, study what advertisers, salespeople and influencers do to bend us and turn and look at the degree to which variables like gender, class and ethnicity influence and control what we see, how we see and how we respond to the stimulus of everyday life.

    Students will work on diverse small assignments connected to the main thrust of the course, individually or in groups. Even though social psychology relies on both qualitative and quantitative methods the emphasis in the assignments will be on qualitative methods such as visual analysis, conversation analysis and participatory observations.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ063M
    Dress, Boundaries and Culture Creation in 19th Century Iceland hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Taught in August 2022

    An investigation into the role of apparel in the formation of cultural boundaries and national identity in Iceland during the long 19th century (c.1790-1920). Clothing-practices, male and female, are considered in terms of defining a visible Icelandic identity in response to international fashions and style-trends. Special emphasis is placed on female costume. Theories on the development of cultural boundaries are introduced, as well as an approach toward investigating and interpreting primary sources in a cultural investigation. Travelogues and correspondences as well as historical journals and newspapers will be looked at to consider the dialogue across –and the development of— cultural boundaries in the conscious establishment of a national identity. Students will utilize the sources presented in a final written exam to illustrate evaluate and explain the effect and use of apparel by groups and individuals in the formation and establishment of cultural boundaries.

     

    Instructor:  Dr. Karl Aspelund, Associate Professor, University of Rhode Island.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF002F
    Theories in Museum Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The reading material be based on on essential theoretical works as well as recent research. The history of the field will be critically examined in light of trends at the beginning of the 21st century. The course is intended for students at masters and diploma levels. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussion.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ110F
    Humanimals: Relations between humans and animals hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Relations between humans and animals are the focus of this course, which will be approached from both an academic and an artistic standpoint. Students will complete independent projects on an animal of their choice and attend field trips in nature and museums. The lectures will focus on diverse animals, such as polar bears, whales, great auks and puffins and recent scholarship on them. We will dig into visual and material representations of these, and other, animals in varied cultural contexts, including medieval literature, folktales, oral tradition, film, news reports, material culture and tourism. Consideration will be given to the idea of an “afterlife” of animals in the form of artworks, museum artefacts and souvenirs. We will examine artefacts in both private and public collections and pose the questions of what happens when a living animal is turned into a museum object, and how the meaning that we bestow upon an animal can be subject to development and change under different circumstances. The role of animals in the creation of knowledge and formation of discourse surrounding climate change and issues of the Arctic regions will also be addressed, in addition to animals’ connections to specific places and cultural groups and their role in identity formations of past and present. An attempt will be made to step outside of “traditional” dualism in which an emphasis is placed on distinctions between humans and animals as we acquaint ourselves with the ways in which human/animal (ecological, social and cultural) habitats are intertwined.

    Aim

    The aim is to explore urgent questions and topical issues regarding human/animal co-existence, climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental sustainability. We will consider how artists, researchers, activists and museums have been engaging with these questions and how they can further contribute to the discussion. We will examine how diverse museums convey their ideas and information on human/animal relations through their collections. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with visual material, objects and texts, both online and through visits to museums and exhibitions. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN018F
    Development cooperation: Approaches and Institutions. Reading course. hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats the debate on aid effectiveness, and institutions and actors within international aid, approaches to development cooperation, and their strengths and weaknesses. Multilateral institutions, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations and emerging donors will be presented. Important approaches to aid, such as project support, sector-wide approach, budget support, result-based management, participatory methods and gender sensitive approaches will be introduced. as well as challenges in environmental and resource management and disaster aid.

    Note: The course is only open to students that are yet to complete this course as a mandatory option, i.e. students registered for a postgraduate diploma in Development studies or Global health, and Global study MA-students with development studies as area of specialization.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF027F
    Managing Cultural Institutions hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces students to the theoretical foundations of managing cultural institutions, such as museums, and government cultural administration with the aim of providing an insight into important cultural work in society. Culture is discussed in a historical context, along with state and city government cultural policies, the legal framework of cultural activities and policy making. The role and unique status of cultural government and museums will be discussed as well as the organizational framework of the state and regions. Students will also be introduced to project and institutional management, the importance of professional governance of project management, financial management and human resource management. The above will be discussed within the framework of Iceland, the Nordic region and globally, and in relation to democracy and public accessibility to cultural heritage

    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • MAN509M
    Environmental anthropology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on anthropological research on nature and the environment, as well as ideas from other human and social sciences, on the relationship between people and their environment. Various basic terms and theories central to environmental anthropology and related fields will be introduced and discussed.

    The course explores several attempts to throw light on the emergence and characteristics of various cultural and social institutions and practices by reference to ecological systems and material relations as their foundation. It will also address critique of such attempts. 

    A particular emphasis will be placed on changing views on the environment that have emerged in recent years, including ideas of resource extraction and management and several forms of environmentalisms.

    Last but not least the many interactions of climate change causes and effects and societies will be explored as they are materialising all over the globe. Climate, climate change and society and culture, and their mutual influences, will also be investigated as a historical theoretical issue, from various points of view.

    Several ethnographic examples of human-environment interaction will be examined throughout the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museum! hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Missing

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A6F
    Anthropology of art hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course the focus is upon anthropologists' discussion of art. Different definitions of the concept will be considered and, in that context, the relation of art to aesthetics and ethics. Answers will be sought to the question of whether all work that appears artistic to westernized perception is indeed so to those who produce this work. Authorship, authenticity and problems arising from the interaction between different cultural traditions will be considered. In order to shed light on these issues various ethnographic studies throughout the world will be studied.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A7F
    Iceland: Anthropological Past, Present and Future hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on a number of key areas of Icelandic society and culture from an anthropological perspective. The course will build upon a set of themes that have a long tradition within the anthropology of Iceland, but a particular emphasis will be placed upon the contemporary context and emergent issues that are confronting Icelandic society.  The instruction will be in English in order to make the course accessible to non-Icelandic speaking students, but also to strengthen the English academic writing skills of non-native speakers of English.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ107F
    Performance Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Performance Studies is the study of how humans create meaning and identity through shared activities ranging from traditional ritual and religion to storytelling and the arts as well as sports, stand-up comedy, festivals, masking traditions, civic ceremonies, political action and protest, dinner parties, and the virtual world. The course introduces students to theories about the wide range of semiotics involved in performance, from spoken text, to costume and appearance, expression and gesture, gender, social contexts, timing and use of space, as well as audience reception.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102F
    Theories and Perspectives in Disability Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the historical development of theories and perspectives on disability. Emphasis will be on ideologies that have influenced policies, services and disabled people everyday lives and social participation (i.e. normalization, independent living and human rights conventions). Considerable time will be devoted to exploring the new discipline Disability Studies, its origins, main characteristics and relations to other scholarship. Different theoretical perspectives on disability will be examined and the influence of particular theoretical approaches on the development of disability theory. Theoretical discussion will be connected to the disabled people's movements, human rights (including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities), national and international policies, law and the social situation of disabled people.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR302M
    The Life Span, Self and Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The conditions and experiences of disabled people will be a central focus of this course with emphasis on the lifespan and main areas of everyday life such as family, education, employment and housing/homes. New Icelandic and international disability research will be explored as well as the forces which influence the identity formation of disabled children, youth and adults. Different theoretical approaches will be used to examine policy, law, services, the welfare system and disabled people's status and social situation in contemporary societies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • KYN101F
    General Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course addresses the main issues in gender studies through the lens of diversity in modern societies. The gender perspective is applied to provide an overview of the status and condition of men and women. The origins and development of the fight for women’s rights and gender studies as an academic field. The main concepts of gender studies are introduced, including sex, gender, essentialism and constructivism. Finally, the course looks into how gender necessarily intersects with other social factors.

    Teaching Arrangement: The course is based on flipped learning, which means that all lectures will be available on Canvas. On-campus and distance students attend weekly discussion sessions at the university or on Teams, and online students participate in weekly discussions on Canvas

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN0A3F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are the focus of this course. The global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized, as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health from a global perspective, as well as health systems designed to provide good and timely services. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL001F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL090F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL213F
    (In)equality and welfare in the Nordic countries hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The Nordic welfare model is frequently viewed as an ideal model for other welfare state, as it has achieved the greatest success in equalizing outcomes. Iceland is a part of the nordic model, but it is different in many ways, for example with more limited support to individuals and less spending on welfare. Yet, there have been great achievements regarding equality, Iceland is generally among the countries with the highest levels of gender equality and multiple indicators that measure inequality are lowest in Iceland.

     In this course, we will go over the major sociological theories on inequality and the welfare state, and the position of Iceland will be considered both compared to the other Nordic countries as well as other welfare state in advanced, industralized nations. We will focus on the organization of the welfare state, how scholars have classified welfare states, and the consequences of the welfare state for example for health, inequality, and the opportunities that individuals have in society.

    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL601M
    Sexual Violence, Law and Justice hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Over the past years, public discussion on how to address cases of sexual violence has been heated, particularly in the aftermath of the #MeToo Movement. Research shows that only a small percentage of such cases are reported to the police and only a small number of those cases lead to a conviction. This has been called a justice gap. Increasingly, we see victim-survivors of sexual violence tell their stories on social media, or in the media, and in some cases alleged offenders are named publicly which has evoked different responses amongst the public and had various consequences.

    In this course, these societal developments will be explored from the perspective of sociology of law. Sociology of law uses theories and methods from the social sciences to examine the law, legal institutions, and legal behaviours, in the effort to analyse legal phenomena in their social, cultural, and historical contexts. To shed further light on the treatment of sexual violence cases, this course will also include readings from criminology, victimology, gender studies and the health sciences.

    The course will seek answers to the following questions and more: Who commits sexual violence and why? How are men’s experiences of being subjected to sexual violence different from women’s experiences? Why is the legal status and rights of defendants different from that of victims? How is law in the books different from law in practice? How has the criminal justice system developed historically? What characterises legal education and the legal profession? What is the difference between legal consciousness and legal culture? How does legal justice differ from social justice? What are the advantages and disadvantages to non-traditional justice systems in comparison to traditional justice systems?

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FÉL0A5F
    Globalization hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course revolves around the main features and the development of globalization, with special emphasis on how it changes the surroundings of people in present times in a variety of ways.

    The course is divided into three themed blocks focusing on mobilities, transnationalism and inequalities. Topics discussed within these themes revolve around how micro-level social practices connect to macrostructural processes and institutions. We will discuss how individuals, groups and organizations connect transnationally; how people, knowledge, ideas and things travel on a global scale; and how these new transnational social spaces, and mobilities within them, are changing the dynamics within the social order, including stratification and differentiation along racial, class, and gender lines. The course provides the opportunity to explore how these practises and processes impact on lived realities, including health and well-being, working lives and security. The course consists of lecturers and discussion lessons in which students will take an active role.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL0A4F
    Crime in Iceland hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is criminology? Criminological data and what criminologists do.

    Crime definitions and how crime can be explained and understood. Examples of different theoretical perspectives will be covered in class: Classical Criminology and Social & Psychological Theories. What kind of criminological research and research questions are used with different theories? 

    Using this theoretical background, a number of crime types and topics within Icelandic criminology will be presented and discussed in class, including the following: Physical and sexual violence, alcohol and drugs in society, crime and punishment, public attitudes to crime and punishment, and social crisis and crime. 

    Students write a seminar paper and a diary (portfolio) of the topics presented in class. Final exam on-site.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL089F
    Survey research methods hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The purpose of this course is to provide students with understanding on how to plan and conduct survey research. The course will address most common sampling design and different type of survey research (phone, face-to-face, internet, mail etc.). The basic measurement theories will be used to explore fundamental concepts of survey research, such as validity, reliability, question wording and contextual effect. The use of factor analysis and item analysis will be used to evaluate the quality of measurement instruments.  The course emphasizes students’ active learning by planning survey research and analyzing survey data.

    This course is taught every other year.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL007F
    Criminal Justice and Policing hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is in direct continuation of Criminological Theory and covers a variety of issues related to crime and society. This involves, among other things, the nature of crime and criminal law, corrections and the role of police in society.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FOM006F
    Regression methods 2: Analysis of ordinal and nominal dependent variables. hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course we cover regression methods where the dependent variable is dichotomous (binary logistic regression) ordinal (ordinal regression) or multinomial. The courses emphasize application in social sciences. Students should have completed FOM401M Regression 1 that addresses assumptions and application of linear regression.  In this course we start with review of basic descriptive statistics and inferential statistics for categorical and ordinal variables. Bivariate and multivariate cross tables, percent, probabilities, ratios, odds ratios, and proportions, measures of association and chi-square test of independence.  Then we address in some details binary logistics regression with emphasize of interpreting regression coefficients. The binary logistic regression method is then extended to ordinal regression.  Then we extend the binary logistic regression method to multinomial regression. We address methods to work with different and complex sample design with and without sample weights. We will address multilevel regression methods. We will both use SPSS and R statistical packages.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL098F
    Health and Inequality hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Social inequality impacts health. Those who are more vulnerable in society have, in general, worse health than those with more resources. In this course, we will focus on the relationship between social standing and health. Students will be introducted to the major theories within medical sociology, for example Link and Phelan´s theory of fundamental causes of disase and we will cover major empirical research in the field. One of the most important contribution of sociology is an understanding of how larger societal forces (for example, the health system and the welfare system) shape individual lives and therefore we will look at how the relationship between social standing and health is shaped by these forces. Since our health is a complex phenomenon we will also look at it from an interdisciplinary perspective, by using insights from public health, health science, antropology, and political science.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL018M
    Applied regression project hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Course description In this course students will use regression models to complete a supervised project with binomial, ordinal or multinomial outcome variables.

    The supervising teacher will assist students in finding advisors for their project.

    Students are expected to have completed the course Regression Analysis

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ606M
    Fashion and Apparel: Theories and Analysis of Material Culture in an Industrialized Market Society hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course focuses on fashion as a manifestation of material culture resulting from the behavior of individuals in society. Students investigate theories on fashion in industrialized market-economies, while considering various theories in philosophy, sociology, ethnology and anthropology. Concepts of influential factors in the development of apparel fashions will be critically reviewed and analyzed with a view toward students’ local community. The relationship of fashion development to different demographics, specifically in terms of gender, class, sexuality, age, and other significant demographics of social differentiation will be especially noted. An investigation into the “spirit of our time” (the “Zeitgeist”), and a field-study on the fashions of specific groups or locations will be conducted. These lead to a consideration of findings in the light of the theories presented. The investigations and discussions all lead to a final project resulting in a definition and analysis of the development and nature of current fashions as well as a formal forecast of future fashions and fashion–culture.

    Self-study
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ203F
    Old Nordic Religion and Belief hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An examination will be made of the religious beliefs and practices of people in Scandinavia from the earliest of times until the conversion, material ranging from burial practices to rock carvings, to the written evidence given in the works of Tacitus, Adam of Bremen and Saxo Grammaticus, as well as in early Icelandic works like the Eddic poems and the Kings' sagas. Alongside this discussion of the development and key features of Old Norse religion, some attention will be paid to the concepts of seid and shamanism, especially in connection to their role in early religions. Finally, an examination will be made of the conversion of Scandinavia and how Christian concepts and practices both fitted and contrasted with the previously dominant Old Norse worldview.

    Teaching format

    • The teaching takes place in the form of lectures and discussion on the material of the lectures.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF018M
    What a mess? The bionomics of heritage and museum ecologies hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course engages with museum and heritage ecologies and entanglements of nature and culture. The course draws on posthuman and new materialist theories to examine entanglements and human/non-human agencies in relation to heritage ecologies and museums in the present. Particular attention is payed to heritage as a dynamic human/non-human construct that encourages connections and change. To this end, the course draws on lcelandic cases and research led teaching.

    Prerequisites
  • MAN507M
    Urban Anthropology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    According to the United Nation’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs, slightly over half of the world’s population lives in urban areas. This is projected to be 66% percent by the year 2050, with Africa and Asia accounting for 90% of this new urban growth. Urban anthropology has increasingly played a critically important role in the development of the discipline of anthropology in terms of theory, research methods and social justice movements. This course provides an historical overview of the development of urban anthropology and on through to recent developments. An emphasis will be placed on anthropological theory and research methods, but also issues such as social justice, architecture, design and urban planning. The course will cover, among others, the early Chicago ethnographers and early urban poverty research, utopian and modernist urban planning, power and built form, divisions and gated communities, crime and urban fear, urban homelessness, and the governance of built spaces. The course will conclude with a section on cities in transition, which includes a focus on the post-industrial/global city, the effects of neoliberalism on urban spaces, and a discussion of the possible future(s) of urbanism and the role of anthropology in understanding these developments.

    Students must have completed 120 ECTS in their BA study before attending this course

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN0A8F
    Common Sense? - The Anthropology of Perception and the Senses hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, the focus will be on the cultural relativity of perception. A central concept here is that of the mode of perception, which refers to a particular integration of the sensorium in a certain cultural context. Visualism, aural cultures, and the multiple possibilities of smell, taste and touch for cultural expression will be among the topics of discussion. The main theories of perception that have provided anthropologists with inspiration will be introduced. There will also be an emphasis on practical experimentation with the students' perception of the various phenomena of the world.

    Aim: To make students aware of the social constitution of perception and its cross-cultural relativity.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN017F
    Multicultural society and migration hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Human mobility and multicultural societies are often seen as the main characteristics of the contemporary world. In the course, we look at main theories approaching mobility and multicultural society, critically addressing them and analyzing their utility. The concept of multiculturalism and related concepts such as culture, assimilation and integration are critically evaluated, as well as mobility in the past and the relationship between mobility and multiculturalism. Different approaches in the social sciences are introduced and main research themes in anthropology in particular and social sciences in general will be examined.

    The teaching methods are lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ201F
    Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on the variety of approaches and methods found within  research. Five qualitative approaches to inquiry are mainly in focus, namely; case study, narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology and grounded theory. Students gain a deeper experiences in data collection and in use of different methods for analyzing their qualitative data. They also gain experience in presenting their findings in written form. Additionally, students have the opportunity to reflect on their own research practices and on themselves as qualitative researchers.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is scheduled to be taught in the spring of 2026.

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN701F
    Project design, monitoring and evaluation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course, students are introduced to concepts and methods for planning, monitoring and evaluating projects/activities. It covers developing a problem statement, mapping stakeholders, development of a project plan, design of project evaluations, introduction to data collection, and reporting on project progress. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of stakeholder participation and gender mainstreaming. Approaches taught in the course are rooted in international development but are useful in the planning, monitoring and evaluation of projects/activities across all sectors. This course is designed to be practical and develop skills that are directly applicable in many workplaces. The teaching is based on a combination of theoretical instruction, discussion of real-life applications, interactive workshops, and guided group work. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FFR102M
    Disability in Contemporary Culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores cultural reactions to disability and disabled people as well as examining the cultural representations and constructions of disability. Special emphasis will be on history, the role of media, popular culture, literature and arts in constructing, defining and representing images of disabled people. Topics also include disability art and culture, identity, femininity and masculinity. The cultural location and context of disability will be examined and how disability can be viewed as one of the aspects creating diversity in contemporary societies. The aim is that students will gain understanding and knowledge of the cultural origins of ideas about disability and will be able to relate them to theoretical perspectives in disability studies, current events and other fields of interest.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN202F
    Gender Studies for Practical Purposes hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides practical preparation for jobs in management, public administration, training, education, media, and other specialized fields. The objective of the course is to introduce students to the basic concepts of practical work for gender equality and provide them with practical training in the field. The course covers the history and meaning of the concept of gender equality, with a special emphasis on gender mainstreaming and gender budgeting. It addresses the representation of gender and the importance of gender responsiveness in social discourse and policy. It also introduces ideas on diversity mainstreaming and intersectionality. Modern societies make ever increasing demands for knowledge on gender equality. Iceland is party to numerous international agreements on gender equality, and the Act on Equal Status and Equal Rights of Women and Men calls for gender mainstreaming in policymaking and public decision making at all levels. That kind of mainstreaming requires knowledge of gender equality, and the Act calls for education in that field at all levels of education. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    NÆR613M
    Food and culture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. The course is intended for students at the masters and diploma levels (but is open to BA students in their final year).

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ022M
    Cultural Heritage hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN211F
    Theories in Gender Studies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course discusses the philosophical and theoretical foundations of gender studies, and the critical and interdisciplinary content of the field. The representation and meaning of sex and gender in language, culture, history, science, and society is explored. The analytical perspective of the field is presented, as is its relationship with methodology. Students are trained in applying theoretical concepts and methods independently and critically.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • KYN212F
    Queer Studies hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is an introductory course that sheds light on the history of LGBTQI people in Iceland, their experiences, movement, and culture. The history is placed in an international context and the main milestones in their fight for human rights are addressed, as are their legal rights. Important aspects of socialization are addressed, such as the forming of one’s identity and the development of visibility, relationships with families of origin and the search for one’s own family of choice. The difference between lesbian and gay studies and queer studies is addressed and theories on the shaping of sex, gender, and gender trouble are reviewed. The discourse between LGBTQ people and social institutions are covered, as is their condition and quality of life. The role of sexuality in cultural representations is examined, exemplified in how the reality of LGBTQI appears in arts and culture. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    MAN603F
    Global health hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Global health priorities are in focus in this course. Global burden of disease across countries will be scrutinized as well as inequality and other important socio-economic determinants of health in a globalized world. Particular focus will be given to maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in low- and middle-income countries, health systems and care-seeking. Global nutritional challenges and mental health issues will be discussed as well as prevention and impact of infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, cholera, Ebola and COVID-19. Along the coursework, other subjects for discussion and analysis with importance for health include violence, environment, culture, disaster and complex emergencies, as well as ethical issues. In addition, the work and policies of international institutions and development organizations will be discussed, including the new Sustainable Development Goals.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ021M
    Gender and Folklore hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The field of Folklore, emerging out of the phenomena collectively referred to as  Modernity, has a complicated and problematic relationship with gender, both in the material that circulates and the subsequent academic treatment of that material. This seminar combines theoretical perspectives from Gender Studies and Folkloristics to better understand the interconnectedness of popular cultural forms, analyses, and the operations of power, specifically gender relations. Beginning with a feminist critique of Folkloristics from within (a historical reference point), we will examine more recent work on the relationship between gender and genre, between the empowering acts of ordinary rituals (so-called women‘s genres), and how the old, debunked Nature/Culture divide, in which women‘s genres were debased and denigrated, may, looked at from a different perspective, suggest alternate approaches to some contemporary global issues.

    Teacher of the course: JoAnn Conrad

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • FÉL009F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Reading course in MA studies in sociology. The student contacts a full-time teacher in a sociology program and requests guidance in an independent reading course. The teacher and the student compile a reading list at the beginning of the second semester and the student, in consultation with the supervisor, regularly reports on progress. The subject must be sociological. The student does not register for the course until the teacher has approved in writing (e.g. by e-mail) his / her role as supervisor.

    Prerequisites
  • FÉL091F
    Reading Course in Sociology hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Einstaklingsnámskeið. Sjálfstæð vinna nemenda á sviði lokaritgerða í samráði við leiðbeinendur.

    Prerequisites
Additional information

The University of Iceland collaborates with over 400 universities worldwide. This provides a unique opportunity to pursue part of your studies at an international university thus gaining added experience and fresh insight into your field of study.

Students generally have the opportunity to join an exchange programme, internship, or summer courses. However, exchanges are always subject to faculty approval.

Students have the opportunity to have courses evaluated as part of their studies at the University of Iceland, so their stay does not have to affect the duration of their studies.

An MA degree in sociology is an asset in a wide range of careers in the public and private sectors.

An education in this area can open up opportunities in:

  • Public administration
  • Social services
  • Leisure, culture and sports
  • Education
  • Finance and insurance
  • Research and consultancy

This list is not exhaustive.

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The School office offers support to students and lecturers, providing guidance, counselling, and assistance with various matters. 

You are welcome to drop by at the office in Gimli or you can book an online meeting in Teams with the staff.

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