Article contents
Emergency Laws in Comparative Constitutional Law – The Case of Sweden and Finland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Abstract
Within Scandinavia, Sweden stands out for not having gone to war in over 200 years. Its neighboring states—Finland, Denmark, and Norway—have not been as fortunate. Their respective constitutions each provide insight into their different experiences. The Swedish Constitution remains silent on emergency situations that do not rise to the predefined level of “war.” The Finnish constitution differs from the Swedish in that it allows for time-limited restrictions to protect fundamental rights and freedoms during a state of emergency, aggression, or any other situation that poses a severe threat to the nation, if stipulated by law and in congruence with international obligations of Finland. Importantly, when and how a government can declare a state of emergency is a question of ordinary law, rather than a constitutional one. This Article offers a comparative constitutional law analysis of the relative constitutional silence in Sweden and Finland as concerns emergency powers. The analysis takes as its starting point Böckenförde's The Repressed State of Emergency: The Exercise of State Authority in Extraordinary Circumstances.
- Type
- Emergency Laws and Constitutionalizing the “State of Emergency”
- Information
- German Law Journal , Volume 19 , Issue 2: Special issue - Statism, Secularism, Liberalism Ernst-Wolfgang Böckenförde Beyond Germany , 01 May 2018 , pp. 219 - 250
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2018 by German Law Journal, Inc.
References
1 As is well known, Carl Schmitt was among the first to make real contributions in this field. See Schmitt, Carl, Politische Theologie: Vier Kapitel zur Lehre von der Souveränität (1922). After his seminal works various phases have followed. See Lazar, Nomi Claire, States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies (2009) (discussing various phases of emergency concepts and attitudes); see e.g., Scheuerman, William E., Survey Article: Emergency Powers and the Rule of Law after 9/11, 14 J. Pol. Phil. 61, 61–62 (2006); Karin Loevy, Emergencies in Public Law: The Legal Politics of Containment (2016).Google Scholar
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[A] proposal on the enactment, amendment or repeal of the Constitution or on the enactment of a limited derogation of the Constitution shall in the second reading be left in abeyance, by a majority of the votes cast, until the first parliamentary session following parliamentary elections. The proposal shall then, once the Committee has issued its report, be adopted without material alterations in one reading in a plenary session by a decision supported by at least two thirds of the votes cast. However, the proposal may be declared urgent by a decision that has been supported by at least five sixths of the votes cast. In this event, the proposal is not left in abeyance and it can be adopted by a decision supported by at least two thirds of the votes cast.Google Scholar
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The President of the Republic, the Government and a Ministry may issue Decrees on the basis of authorization given to them in this Constitution or in another Act. However, the principles governing the rights and obligations of private individuals and the other matters that under this Constitution are of a legislative nature shall be governed by Acts. If there is no specific provision on who shall issue a Decree, it is issued by the Government.
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