4/27/2 He. 467 Centralization of Scandinavian countries by Professor Ika Revski In the mid-17th century, the war between the Scandinavian countries brought about several changes to all the Nordic countries. These changes reorganized the legislative power of the monarch rulers. In some Scandinavian countries the monarchy is very powerful and has the greatest authority over most government decisions.
The centralized model can be divided into two. Scandinavian and Continental Identity Models In the Scandinavian model, private companies (financial and telecommunications companies) offer centralized digital ID services to interact with the government (TUPAS in Finland or BankID in Sweden). In Continental's model, the government provides digital identification services to companies that enable dialogue with citizens. All of these centralized models are listed in the World Economic Forum's report in August 2016. This can be downloaded for free.
. . Scandinavia Europe is the future of Germany's Central Europe. As a racial and national state, Germany functions as a central force in the African continent to protect South and South East; Scandinavian countries to protect Scandinavian countries like the UK where Scandinavian interests are needed Finland I will protect the west and overseas. (7) The birth of this country is due to the fact that the Volcker community has to be ordered according to specific laws. Its characteristic attribute is the power to each department of the community. The state has the right to claim any ethical comrade he lives according to law. Those who violate national law will be punished. In the state there are executives who enforce laws and regulations. The national constitution is the foundation of that law. The country reflects power! In this state, people with different opinions and opinions can live together.
I will introduce the politics and society of the Scandinavian countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden). Focus on historical development, political culture, constitutional enactment, political institutions, political parties and interest groups, Scandinavian welfare state and foreign policy. Prerequisite: Top partition. This course will provide a comparative perspective on the development and operation of the Italian political system. It includes an analysis of political institutions, ideological traditions, political parties and elections, political elites of policy processes, and the importance of changing European integration in Italy.