Unni Wikan

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Unni Wikan (born 18 November 1944) in Harstad, Norway is a professor of social anthropology at the University of Oslo and is the second wife of the well-known Norwegian social anthropologist Fredrik Barth. She has also served as visiting professor at Johns Hopkins University (1977, assistant professor), Ben-Gurion University of the_Negev, Israel (1989) École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris (1996), London School of Economics (1997) Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt (2000), and guest lecturer at Harvard University in 1995, visiting scholar in 1987 and visiting professor in 1999-2000.

Wikan has also worked as a consultant to UNICEF and the World Food Programme in Bhutan from 1989 to 1994, and the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation in Palestine in 1999).

For almost ten years, Wikan has campaigned to change Norwegian policies towards immigrants, arguing that generous welfare and a policy of multicultural tolerance are creating a culture of welfare dependence, and destroying self-respect. A reviewer of her book "Generous Betrayal: Politics of Culture in the New Europe" claims that she used invalid methodology, not giving "a far more complex social reality" its due. "'Unsympathetic readers" might see it as a "racist polemic."[1]

She has argued that far from being a racist, she has significant empathy for the lives of many of the Muslim men she has portrayed in her most recent books. In a well-known case in Norway [The Anooshe case] she argued that the state had not taken into account the social expectations of immigrant men, and this had led to rootless men whose social expectations were not met or even acknowledged, arguing that violence is a product of immigrant consitions when host country laws conflict with the “unwritten social rules” of immigrant societies. [2]

Wikan has performed field work in a number of countries, and her research has resulted in nine books being published. Her works have been translated into Japanese, Polish, Swedish, Danish, Russian and Turkish.

Wikan was awarded the 2004 Freedom of Expression Foundation Prize "for her insightful, outspoken and challenging contribution to the debate on value conflicts in the multi-cultural society."[3]

  • Life Among the Poor in Cairo (Tavistock 1980)
  • Behind the Veil in Arabia: Women in Oman (Johns Hopkins Univsity Press, 1982; paperback, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1991)
  • Managing Turbulent Hearts: A Balinese Formula for Living (University of Chicago Press, 1990)
  • Tomorrow, God Willing: Self-Made Destinies in Cairo (University of Chicago Press, 1996)
  • Generous Betrayal: Politics of Culture in the New Europe (University of Chicago Press, 2002)
  • For ærens skyld - Fadime til ettertanke (2003)
  • Mot en ny underklasse (Towards a new Norwegian underclass)
  • For ærens skyld. Fadime til ettertanke (For the sake of honour: Reflections on Fadime)

  1. ^ Book review of "Generous Betrayal: Politics of Culture in the New Europe" by Paul A. Silverstein, American Ethnologist, November 1, 2004
  2. ^ Culcom:Cultural Complexity in the New Norway, Interview with U. Wikan, February, 2006
  3. ^ Annual Report 2004, Freedom of Expression Foundation, Oslo

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