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Customary law in Sweden and the Lapp Minority
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 May 2009
Extract
At the time when the Norse people surfaced from the dark depths of history there was only one source of law: Custom. Save for a few reflections from Canon Law even the Provincial Laws such as the Vestrogoth Code and the Ostrogoth Code only represented the custom of the land, reduced to memorable form and later to writing.
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References
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52a. In 1747, Jacob Wilde published a major translation into Swedish of Pufendorf's works under the title Friherre Samuel Pufendorfs twenne böcker om menniskiors lefnads- och sammanlefnadsplicht. – In later times, when the Swedish multi-national empire was lost, Pufendorf was almost forgotten in Sweden. Professor Jägerskiöld dismisses him with the observation that he was “also active in Sweden” (Scandia vol. 28, p. 122)Google Scholar and in the Skattefjäll Case, the Supreme Court ignored him almost completely (judgment, p. 75). The best modern work on Pufendorf would seem to be Leonard Krieger, The Politics of Discretion – Pufendorf and the Acceptance of Natural Law, (University of Chicago Press 1965). There exists nothing equivalent in Sweden although Pufendorf spent the better part of his scholarly life in Sweden and indeed published his De Jurae Naturae et Gentium in Lund, Sweden, in 1672Google Scholar.
53. The full text of “Kongl. Maj: ts Nådigste Forordning och Påbud Angåerrde Skogame och hwad därwid i acht tagas bör” is reproduced in Samernas vita bok II: 1 (Stockholm 1974) pp. 229a–229cGoogle Scholar.
54. Judgment, p. 115 and 116 et seq.
55. The Royal Letter of 1542 may be read as applying only to the “Lower Country” (of Sweden), in which case it would not apply to Delaware; but in that case it could not be invoked against the Lapps either, because the Lower Country did not include the Lapp Territories.
56. Judgment, pp. 50, 52.
57. The Skattefjä'll Case was the biggest case ever to be litigated in the Swedish Supreme Court. All in all, the judicial proceedings lasted for 15 years; the documentation collected by the Lapps has been published in a 17-volume series called Samernas Vita Bok, edited by their legal counsel Mr Tomas Cramér.