Stockholm Network

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The Stockholm Network is "Europe's only dedicated service organisation for market-oriented think tanks and thinkers".

It is an umbrella organisation for market-oriented think tanks in Europe. It has over 120 members organisations.

Founder (1997) and director is Helen Disney.

The Network is a forum for sharing, exchanging and developing pan-European research and best practice. Interested in ideas which stimulate economic growth and help people to help themselves, it promotes and raises awareness of policies which create the social and economic conditions for a free society. Its stated goals include:

  • Reforming European welfare states and creating a more flexible labour market.
  • Updating European pension systems to empower individuals.
  • Ensuring more consumer-driven healthcare, through reform of European health systems and markets.
  • Encouraging an informed debate on intellectual property rights as an incentive to innovate and develop new knowledge in the future, whilst ensuring wide public access to such products in the present.
  • Reforming European energy markets to ensure the most beneficial balance between economic growth and environmental quality.

Emphasising the benefits of globalisation, trade and competition and creating an understanding of free market ideas and institutions.


[edit] Programmes

Currently, the Stockholm Network has three programmes: The Health and Welfare Programme, the Intellectual Property & Competition Programme and the Environment Programme. Each was developed in order to further the objective of the Network in searching for practical market-oriented solutions to the endemic problems Europeans face today.

The Stockholm Network Intellectual Property and Competition Programme was established in January 2005 and aims to achieve four key objectives:

  • First, to make the field of intellectual property more mainstream and accessible to the general public.
  • Second, to increase the interaction between specialists focusing on different aspects of intellectual property rights.
  • Third, to encourage discussion, as well as debates, on different burning IP issues.
  • Finally, and perhaps most importantly, to promote European competitiveness.


The Stockholm Network Environment Programme was created in early 2005 in order to promote a practical market-oriented approach to environmental problems. Environmental problems are critical issues for the general public and for policy makers alike. The Stockholm Network work in this programme recognises the importance of environmental policies in safeguarding future prosperity and endeavours to produce practical solutions - solutions that recognise economic realities - to environmental policy dilemmas.


The Stockholm Network's Health and Welfare Programme was established at the end of 2005. The programme has the following key aims and objectives:

  • To provide a comprehensive resource on European think tank initiatives in the field of Health and Welfare
  • To promote competition and choice in healthcare, through reform of European health systems and markets;
  • To promote more flexible labour markets in Europe
  • To promote market oriented reform of Europe's failing pensions systems


[edit] Members

[edit] External links

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