Magnhild Hagelias veg til rikspolitikken
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3106316Utgivelsesdato
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Originalversjon
Igland, A. K. (2022). Magnhild Hagelias veg til rikspolitikken. I F. Meyer (Red.), Arbeid, arbeidere og arbeiderbevegelse på Agder 1500–2020 (Kap. 6, s. 163–184). Cappelen Damm Akademisk. https://doi.org/10.23865/noasp.180.ch6Sammendrag
Magnhild Hagelia (1904–1996), from the southern constituency Aust-Agder, was elected deputy president at Lagtinget (one of the two chambers of parliament) in 1960, and in 1962, she became the first woman to attend a session at the Norwegian Parliament. She grew up in the countryside during a time of deep unemployment, poverty, and social injustice. Motived to join the Social Democratic Party in 1935, she soon became a leading and popular speaker in her region, and in 1949 she unexpectedly won a seat in the parliament. In this article I argue a previously overlooked explanation that Hagelia’s win was not least a result of her Christian faith, which was important to many voters in a region characterised by revival Christianity and prayer houses. As a member of parliament for 16 years, she worked for a more equal society, and for women’s rights.