PhD Courses in Denmark

IMT-PhD: Norm Critical Research E2026

Doctoral School of People and Technology at Roskilde University

Contents

The course is aimed at PhD students with an interest in norm critique, norm critical interventions, and the significance of norms for (in)equality, (in)justice as well as inclusion and exclusion in various societal contexts such as educational practice, urban planning, sustainable transition, innovation, working life, and management.

Norm critique – and particularly norm critical pedagogy – is a Nordic phenomenon which initially grew out of Swedish activist and educational circles. Later, the norm critical approach to equality and social change has spread to the rest of the Nordic countries, and in Sweden it has even become a state-approved approach in diversity and equality work. At the same time, norm critique has encountered a political and public backlash and has been criticized for being yet another strand of identity politics and, thus, undermining society.

This PhD course consolidates the theoretical, methodological and ethical foundations for norm-critical research.

Originally, norm critique draws on Freirean liberation thinking, feminist theory, critical gender studies, intersectionality, queer theory, and critical race theory. Only recently has there been research interest in disentangling, developing, and discussing the theoretical, methodological and ethical basis for norm critique in research across disciplines.

The PhD course taps into these current theoretical, methodological, and ethical discussions of how norm critique can offer new ways of studying inequality with an ethical imperative of social change and refurbish the social obligation of research.

The course is organized around three themes:

The theoretical foundation and epistemology of norm critique: - Modern legacies and postmodern possibilities (Jo Krøjer) - Norms, normalcy and norm violations (Marta Padovan-Özdemir) - Firstness and otherness (Lovise Brade)

Norm-critical methodologies: - Queering as a strategy (Sine Nørholm Just) - Critical design (Camilla Andersson) - Cabinet of Rarities (Marta Padovan-Özdemir)

Norm-critical ethics:

  • Heterotopic horizon of change (Marta Padovan-Özdemir)
  • Feminist ethics of care (Jo Krøjer)

In this way, the participants get the opportunity to sharpen their understanding of norm critique as a research approach and perspective, while at the same time being able to observe and relate to the ethical imperative of norm critique.