Iceland and the Nordic Model of Consensus (2014)

In this explorative article, published in Scandinavian Journal of History 39:4 2014, the author argues that consensus politics, meaning policy concertation between major interest groups in society, a tendency to form broad coalitions in important political issues and a significant cooperation between government and opposition in Parliament, is not an apt term to describe the political reality in Iceland during the second half of the 20th century. Icelandic democracy is better described as more adversarial than consensual in style and practice.