Iceland and the Nordic Model of Consensus (2014)

The Nordic countries have been portrayed in the political-science literature as consensual democracies, characterised by institutional mechanisms which favour consensus-building over majority rule and adversarial politics. In this article, published in Scandinavian Journal of History 39:4 2014, the author argues that the Nordic model of consensus democracy does not fit well with the political reality in Iceland in the second half of the 20th century.