Notes
-
Statistics Sweden. Yearbook of
Housing and Building Statistics 2007.
Statistics Sweden, Energy, Rents and
Real Estate Statistics Unit, 2007.
ISBN 9789161813612. Available online
in
pdf format.
-
CIA World Factbook: Economy - Sweden:
"Sweden has achieved an enviable
standard of living under a mixed system
of high-tech capitalism and extensive
welfare benefits. It has a modern
distribution system, excellent internal
and external communications, and a
skilled labor force. [...] Privately
owned firms account for about 90% of
industrial output, of which the
engineering sector accounts for 50% of
output and exports. Agriculture accounts
for only 1% of GDP and 2% of
employment."
-
De
Geer, Hans, Tommy Borglund and Magnus
Frostenson (2003). An Anglo-Swedish
affair — Changing relations in an
international acquisition. The 17th
Nordic Conference on Business Studies in
Reykjavík, 14-16 August 2003. Working
paper within the project "Scandinavian
Heritage", p. 9. Available online
in pdf-format through the University
of Iceland.
-
Swedish Environmental Protection Agency
(Naturvårdsverket) (2006).
Sweden's Environmental Objectives -
Buying into a better future. A
progress report from the Swedish
Environmental Objectives Council. De
Facto, 2006, p. 9: "Swedes in general
feel that environmental issues and
action to reduce impacts on the
environment are important". See also
Legislation & guidelines and
Greenhouse gas emissions: "Swedish
greenhouse gas emissions per head of
population are among the lowest in the
member states of the OECD."
-
Kristrom, Bengt and Soren Wibe (1997).
Environmental Policy in Sweden.
Swedish University of Agricultural
Sciences - Department of Forest
Economics, Working paper 246, 27 August
1997.
-
Nordstrom, Byron J. (2000).
Scandinavia since 1500, University
of Minnesota Press, p. 1: "The record of
human activity in Scandinavia spans
about eleven thousand years. By far the
greatest share of this, about ten
thousand years (from the earliest
evidence of human presence to the Viking
Age), belongs to prehistory, to the past
at its most obscure. Evidence for these
times is fragmentary, scattered, and
often subject to conflicting
interpretations."
-
Nordstrom, Byron
(2000). Scandinavia Since 1500,
University of Minnesota Press, pp. 3–14.
-
The
Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.
2001-05
[1]
-
Sawyer, Birgit
and Peter Sawyer (1993). Medieval
Scandinavia: from Conversion to
Reformation, Circa 800–1500.
University of Minnesota Press, 1993.
ISBN 0816617392, pp. 150-153.
-
Bagge,
Sverre (2005). "The Scandinavian
Kingdoms". In The New Cambridge
Medieval History. Eds. Rosamond
McKitterick et al. Cambridge University
Press, 2005.
ISBN 052136289X, p. 724: "Swedish
expansion in Finland led to conflicts
with Rus', which were temporarily
brought to an end by a peace treaty in
1323, dividing the Karelian peninsula
and the northern areas between the two
countries."
-
(1998) Encyclopedia of Canada's
Peoples. University of Minnesota
Press, 1220.
ISBN 0-8020-2938-8.
-
Koblik, Steven (1975). Sweden's
Development from Poverty to Affluence
1750-1970 University of Minnesota
Press, p.8-9 "In economic and social
terms the eighteenth century was more a
transitional than a revolutionary
period. Sweden was, in light of
contemporary Western European standards,
a relatively poor but stable country.
[...] It has been estimated that 75 to
80 percent of the population was
involved in agricultural pursuits during
the late eighteenth centur. One hundred
years later, the corresponding figure
was still 72 percent."
-
Einhorn, Eric and John Logue (1989).
Modern Welfare States: Politics and
Policies in Social Democratic
Scandinavia. Praeger Publishers,
p.9: "Though Denmark, where
industrialization had begun in the
1850s, was reasonably prosperous by the
end of the nineeenth century, both
Sweden and Norway were terribly poor.
Only the safety valve of mass emigration
to America prevented famine and
rebellion. At the peak of emigration in
the 1880s, over 1 percent of the total
population of both countries emigrated
annually."
-
Einhorn, Eric and John Logue (1989).
Modern Welfare States: Politics and
Policies in Social Democratic
Scandinavia. Praeger Publishers,
p.8.
-
Koblik, Steven
(1975). Sweden's Development from
Poverty to Affluence 1750-1970
University of Minnesota Press, pp. 9-10.
-
Sweden: Social and economic conditions
(2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica.
Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Retrieved 19 February 2007.
-
Koblik, Steven (1975). Sweden's
Development from Poverty to Affluence
1750-1970 University of Minnesota
Press, p. 11: "The agrarian revolution
in Sweden is of fundamental importance
for Sweden's modern development.
Throughout Swedish history the
countryside has taken an unusually
important role in comparison with other
European states."
-
Koblik, Steven (1975). Sweden's
Development from Poverty to Affluence
1750-1970 University of Minnesota
Press, p. 90. "It is usually suggested
that between 1870 and 1914 Sweden
emerged from its primarily agrarian
economic system into a modern industrial
economy."
-
For
instance: "As regards social evils
generally, however, the low, though
undoubtedly improving, standard of
Sweden has had one of its chief reasons
in the national intemperance." Article
Sweden in the online 1911
Encyclopædia Britannica.
-
Koblik,
pp. 303-313.
-
Nordstrom, p. 315: "Sweden's government
attempted to maintain at least a
semblance of neutrality while it bent to
the demands of the prevailing side in
the struggle. Although effective in
preserving the country's sovereignty,
this approach generated criticism at
home from many who believed the threat
to Sweden was less serious than the
government claimed, problems with the
warring powers, ill feelings among its
neighbors, and frequent criticism in the
postwar period."
-
Nordstrom, pp.
313-319.
Nordstrom, pp.
335-339.
-
Nordstrom, p. 344: "During the last
twenty-five years of the century a host
of problems plagued the ec
-
onomies of Norden and the West. Although many were
present before, the 1973 and 1980 global
oil crises acted as catalysts in
bringing them to the fore."
-
2006 census from the
Statistics Sweden website.
-
Statistics Sweden.Preliminary
Population Statistics, by month, 2004 -
2006. Population statistics,
1 January 2007. Retrieved 14 February
2007.
-
The
Swedish Integration Board (2006).
Pocket Facts: Statistics on Integration.
Integrationsverket, 2006.
ISBN 9189609301. Available online in
pdf format. Retrieved 14 February
2007.
-
SCB.
Sveriges befolkning, kommunala
jämförelsetal, 31/12/2006 31
December 2006. (In Swedish). Retrieved 3
April 2007.
-
Nordstrom, p. 353. (Lists Former
Yugoslavia and Iran as top two countries
in terms of immigration beside "Other
Nordic Countries," based on Nordic
Council of Ministers Yearbook of
Nordic Statistics, 1996, 46-47)
-
Svenskan blir inte officiellt språk,
Sveriges Television, 2005-12-07.
Retrieved on July 23 2006. (in Swedish)
-
English spoken - fast ibland hellre än
bra
(Swedish). Lund University
newsletter 7/1999.
-
"Sweden
in Brief/A Political Society",
Sweden.se. Retrieved on
2007
February 14.
-
Kungl. Maj:ts kungörelse med anledning
av konung Gustaf VI Adolfs frånfälle.
SFS 1973:702. Justitiedepartementet L6,
19 September 1973.
-
The Swedish
Parliament.
The history of the Riksdag.
Retrieved 13 February 2007.
-
The
Official Wesbite of the Swedish Riksdag.
Riksdagen, Ledamöter och partier.
-
SCB figures about energy production and
usage 1994-2003 - in Swedish
-
"Nuclear Power in Sweden" - Uranium
Information Centre, Australia
-
"Swedish nuclear power station leaks
high levels of radioactive waste into
Baltic" - Forbes June 29, 2005
-
Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, Sweden.
Agenda 21 - Natural Resource Aspects -
Sweden. 5th Session of the
United Nations Commission on Sustainable
Development, April 1997.
-
Vidal, John.
Sweden plans to be world's first
oil-free economy. The Guardian,
2/8/06. Retrieved 2/13/07.
-
Nordstrom p. 302: "In fact, the plans
were mostly a ruse to establish control
of the crucial Norwegian port of Narvik
and the iron mines of northern Sweden,
which were vitally important to the
German war efforts."
-
Nordstrom, p 336: "As a corollary, a
security policy based on strong national
defenses designed to discourage, but not
prevent, attack was pursued. For the
next several decades, the Swedes poured
an annual average of about 5 percent of
GDP into making their defenses
credible."
-
"Sweden
most creative country in Europe & top
talent hotspot", Invest in Sweden
Agency, 25 June 2005.
-
The Swedish Parliament
-
Swedish National Debt Office(2006).
-
"Law of the Labour Back Benches" - New
Statesman September 6, 2004
-
Church of Sweden,
Members 1978-2004, PDF document in
Swedish
-
Statistics about free churches and
immigration churches from Swedish
Wikipedia - in Swedish
-
Swedish Newspaper - in Swedish
-
Eurostat poll on the social and
religious beliefs of Europeans
Eurobarometer, (PDF
format)
-
Celsing, Charlotte.
Are Swedes losing their religion?.
The Swedish Institute, 1 September 2006.
Retrieved 19 February 2007.
-
"The
Swedish Myths: True, False, or Somewhere
In Between?", Sweden.se.
Retrieved on
2007
February 14.
-
Durant, Colin (2003). Choral
Conducting: philosophy and practice,
Routledge, pp. 46-47.
ISBN 0415943566: "Sweden has a
strong and enviable choral singing
tradition. In fact, out of a population
of 8.9 million, it is estimated that
between five hundred thousand and six
hundred thousand people sing in
choirs... All those interviewed placed
great emphasis on the social
identification through singing and also
referred to the importance of Swedish
folk song in the maintenance of the
choral singing tradition and national
identity."
-
Music in Sweden at
Swedish Institute website, accessed
Feb. 2007
Back to Sweden's Homepage
References
-
Bagge, Sverre (2005). "The Scandinavian
Kingdoms". In The New Cambridge Medieval
History. Eds. Rosamond McKitterick et
al. Cambridge University Press, 2005.
ISBN 052136289X.
-
CIA World Factbook -
Sweden
-
Council for Official Statistics.
"Preliminär befolkningsstatistik 2006"Statistics
Sweden.
-
Durant, Colin (2003). Choral
Conducting: philosophy and practice,
Routledge, pp. 46-47.
ISBN 0415943566.
-
Einhorn, Eric and John Logue (1989).
Modern Welfare States: Politics and Policies
in Social Democratic Scandinavia.
Praeger Publishers, 1989.
ISBN 0275931889.
-
Invest in Sweden Agency (ISA) (2005).
Sweden most creative country in Europe and
top talent hotspot. Press release, 25
June 2005.
-
Koblik, Steven (1975). Sweden's
Development from Poverty to Affluence
1750-1970. University of Minnesota
Press.
ISBN 0816607575.
-
Magocsi, Paul Robert (1998).
Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples.
University of Minnesota Press, 1998.
ISBN 0802029388.
-
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sweden.
Agenda 21 - Natural Resource Aspects -
Sweden. 5th Session of the United
Nations Commission on Sustainable
Development, April 1997.
-
Nordstrom, Byron J. (2000).
Scandinavia since 1500. University of
Minnesota Press, 2000.
ISBN 0816620989.
-
Sawyer, Birgit and Peter Sawyer (1993).
Medieval Scandinavia: from Conversion to
Reformation, Circa 800-1500. University
of Minnesota Press, 1993.
ISBN 0816617392.
-
Ståhl, Solveig. (1999).
"English spoken - fast ibland hellre än bra".
LUM, Lunds universitet meddelar,
7:1999, 3 September 1999. In Swedish.
-
Statistics Sweden.
2006 census.
-
Statistics Sweden.
Preliminary Population Statistics, by month,
2004 - 2006. Population statistics,
1 January 2007.
-
Statistics Sweden. Yearbook of
Housing and Building Statistics 2007.
Statistics Sweden, Energy, Rents and Real
Estate Statistics Unit, 2007.
ISBN 9789161813612. Available online in
pdf format.
-
"Sweden". In The Columbia
Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2001-05.
-
Sweden. In Encyclopædia
Britannica, 1911.
-
Sweden: Social and economic conditions
(2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica.
Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
-
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