From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swedish journalist, writer, and historian
Rolf Anders Isaksson (9 May 1943 – 17 January 2009) was a
Swedish journalist, writer, and historian, possibly best known for his four-volume
biography of Swedish
social democratic politics and
Prime Minister
Per Albin Hansson 's life.
[1]
Isaksson was born in
Piteå in northern
Sweden , and worked for many years as a
reporter , and foreign
correspondent for
radio and
television . He was a
syndicated columnist at the
Dagens Industri business paper, worked for
Business Week and worked as an opinion editor for the
Dagens Nyheter . In 1987, Isaksson was awarded the Swedish
Stora Journalistpriset ("Great Journalist Award").
[2]
[3] Isaksson died just before his latest book Kärlek och krig. Revolutionen år 1809 ("Love and war. The Revolution of 1809") would be published. In the book, which was his last, Isaksson tells the story of the fall of the
Swedish Empire and army commander
Georg Adlersparre 's life.
[4]
Isaksson was married to the former Senior Administrative Head-officer, Mona Danielsson, who served as Chief Officer of the Swedish Government's Gender Equality Unit at the Industry Ministry until 19 May 2000.
Bibliography
Per Albin. Del 1: Vägen till folkhemmet (1985),
ISBN
91-46-15026-9
Per Albin. Del 2: Revolutionären (1990),
ISBN
91-46-15295-4
Per Albin. Del 3: Partiledaren (1996),
ISBN
91-46-16886-9
Per Albin. Del 4: Landsfadern (2000),
ISBN
91-46-17683-7
När pengarna är slut - välfärden efter välfärdsstaten (1992)
Alltid mer, aldrig nog - om medborgaren, staten och välfärden (1994)
Politik och politiker - krönikor från ett epokskifte (1996)
Den politiska adeln - Politikens förvandling från uppdrag till yrke (2002)
Den politiska adeln (2006 reviderad och utökad upplaga)
Kollegiet för sysselsättande av de arbetslösa - Riksrevisionen om arbetsmarknadspolitiken (2006),
ISBN
91-7566-628-6
Ebbe - mannen som blev en affär (2007),
ISBN
91-85555-03-7
References
^
DN-medarbetaren Anders Isaksson har avlidit [
dead link ] , Dagens Nyheter, 17 January 2009.
^
Anders Isaksson
Archived 4 March 2016 at the
Wayback Machine , Stora Journalistpriset 1987.
^
Anders Isaksson, frilans, Veckans Affärer [
permanent dead link ] , Stora Journalistpriset.
^
En utmärkt uttolkare av det förflutna
Archived January 21, 2009, at the
Wayback Machine , Dagens Nyheter, 17 January 2009.