Nordregio is an international research institute established by the Nordic Council of Ministers

Senior Analyst / Cartographer

Gustaf Norlén

Specialised in quantitative statistical data management (collection, harmonisation, visualisation) and regional development analysis with a geographical focus on the Nordic region and the Baltic Sea Region.

Academic qualifications
Msc in Human Geography, Stockholm University, Sweden

Languages
Swedish
English
German
Spanish

Prior positions
Geo-Data collector, NOKIA Location & Commer ce, Stockholm, Sweden, 2010-2013

Spatial Story

When I was ten years old my family and I left the suburbs of Stockholm, where I grew up, and moved to Kenya for three years. That experience of, what felt like, a totally other world has made me very aware of geographical differences ever since. After high school, I got the opportunity to go back to Kenya for six months. This time, to work as a volunteer in a project for street children in a town called Kitale, in the western part of the country. It was an interesting and eye opening experience that was fun, but also created a lot of questions. The big questions of why there are such big socio-economic inequalities between countries, as well as, between regions within countries and districts within cities. But, also smaller questions on how the local society worked, what was the reason for people moving to cities, although there were no formal jobs there and how they actually made a living. My feeling was that a lot of projects started from good intentions, but that they were not based on a thorough investigation of the actual socio-economic context. Before leaving Sweden I had planned to study engineering, but browsing through the university catalogue I found human geography that promised to explain (or at least address) the above-mentioned issues.

Except for my experiences of living in Africa I have mainly lived in the surroundings of Stockholm, which often makes me think that my spatial story is rather boring. But then I remind myself that I lived ten years in Rinkeby, a place that is anything but boring. At least, if you trust the news. Rinkeby is a suburb in the north-western part of Stockholm that was built in the 60s and 70s as a part of the “million program”, a state led program meant to build a million dwellings in ten years. Although geographically Rinkeby is rather small it has become a symbol of all Swedish suburbs with a high share of immigrants and socio-economic problems. To live in a symbol means that everything that happens is a sign of something else, and that everyone, as it turns out even the president of the United States, has an explanation of the reasons behind what happens. I was often astonished that so many had an opinion on Rinkeby and how it is there, without even having been there and how different the perception was to reality.

In a time of opinions and alternative facts, I agree with Hans Rosling that it is important to have a fact-based worldview. That a good understanding of the socio-economic context based on solid facts is needed to make a relevant change was something that I have learnt from living in Kenya and Rinkeby. This is also one of the thing that motivates me to work with socio economic analysis.

Related Research Projects
Ongoing
Sustainable Nordic Remote Labour Markets (SUNREM) Giving Rural Actors Novel data and re-Useable tools to Lead public Action in Rural areas (GRANULAR)
Finished
Pre-study: Nordic tripartite forum on structural change and the green transition A common Nordic labour market 70 years and beyond (70 ys and beyond) Strategies to address rural labour shortage Strengthening the resilience of EU border regions: Mapping risks & crisis Mapping of labour force and skills supply in the border municipalities of Innlandet, Dalarna and Värmland Electric aviation and the effects on the Nordic regions  Nordic transport infrastructure planning – institutional barriers and opportunities for coordination (NORDINFRA) Re-start competence mobility in the Nordic Region Integrating immigrants into the Nordic labour market – The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic Ensuring inclusive economic growth in the transition to a green economy (EnIGG) Statistical report of Innlandet-Dalarna Economic marine mapping BT 2050 Health care and care with distance-spanning technologies, e-health and digitalisation Follow-up of Värmland strategy Rural realities in the Nordic countries Transport for Regional Integration in Border Regions (TRIBORDER) ESPON Financial Instruments State of Lapland Nordic collaboration for integration of refugees and migrants RELOCAL (Resituating the local in cohesion and territorial development) Unaccompanied minors to the Nordic Region TeMoRI – Territorial Monitoring update and Regional potential Index for the Baltic Sea Region Compiling, processing, and visualising statistical data of 33 of the goals of Region Jämtland Härjedalen’s regional development strategy 2014-2030 SEMPRE Towards coherence and cross-border solutions in Maritime Spatial Planning (Baltic SCOPE) Study on the ESIF performance framework Enhanced Nordic-Baltic cooperation on challenges of labour mobility in the Nordic-Baltic region 2014-2015 Upholding of the Baltic Sea Region – Territorial Monitoring System Compiling, processing, analysing and visualising statistical data of 32 of the goals of the Värmland Strategy
Related Maps
Regional Potential Index 2022 Nordiska gränskommittéer 2025 Regions and municipalities in the Nordic Region 2023 Electricity production 2021 Greenhouse gas emissions intensity of employment in 2022 Tertiary education attainment level 2022 Employment in high-skilled occupations 2022 Labour supply replacement 2023 Working age population – 2023-2040 change Employment rate (55-74 years) 2022 Employment rate 2022 and Employment rate change 2020-2022 among foreign-born Employment rate 2022 Regions and municipalities in the Nordic Region 2023 Longing for a cultural Christmas holiday? Going on a trip above the Arctic circle might be a good idea! Access to fixed broadband at minimum download speed 100 Mpbs Change in work travels Jan-Feb 2020 compared to Nov 2021 Remote work potential Largest Nordic minority 2021 Unemployment typology Cross-border commuting as share of employment The share of laid-off employees at municipal and regional level Change in life expectancy 2019–2020 by country in Europe Gross Value Added (GVA) change 2019-2020 Employment rate 2020  Excess mortality by region Confirmed cases of Covid-19 per 10,000 inhabitants Help Santa to work remotely – where to locate in 2021? Nordic cross-border co-operation committees 2021 Nordic cross-border co-operation committees 2020 Change in overnight stay 2009-2019 Tourism gross value added as a share of GVA 2018 Share of employment in tourism 2017 Labour market impacts of COVID-19 At-risk-of-poverty rate 2011-2018 change Income and inequality typology 2017 Unemployment rate 2018 Tertiary education attainment level of 30- to 34-year-olds 2019 Nordic local labour market areas 2018 Share of jobs at “high risk” of automation Change in working age population 2019-2040 Employment rate 2018 Gross regional product per capita in European regions 2017 Employment rate 2016 related to the EU2020 goal and 2009-2016 change Employment rate 2016 Economic inactivity rate 2016 Change in youth unemployment rate 2009-2016 Youth unemployment rate 2016 Unemployment rate 2016 Employment rate in 2016 Foreign-born inhabitants as a share of total population in 2016 At-risk-of-poverty rate in 2015 Female international net migration rate in 2015 Role of international migration in population change in 2016 International net migration rate in 2015 Foreign born female ratio in 2016 Average international net migration rate 2011-2015 Average domestic net migration rate 2011-2015 Male international net migration rate in 2015 Unaccompanied minors per 1000 inhabitants 2015 Unaccompanied minors per 1000 children 2015 Unaccompanied minors in 2015 Employment rate among females and males in 2014 Number of completed dwellings per 1000 inhabitants in 2014 Nordic Electricity Production Patterns in 2013