Fact Sheet on
Violence against Women
The Ministry of Labour in Cooperation with the Ministry of Justice and
the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, Swedish Government Offices on
Issues Related to Violence against Women.
1999 Swedish Law on Prostitution
The proposals described
in this Fact Sheet are a summary of the Swedish
government's Bill on legislative provisions
and other measures to counteract violence
against women. The Bill was submitted to
Parliament in February, 1998. A decision
by Parliament is expected in May, 1998. The
intention is for the proposed legislative
changes to enter into force on 1 July 1998.
The prohibition on the purchase of sexual
services is however proposed to enter into
force on 1 January 1999.
The proposals described in
this Fact Sheet are a summary of the Swedish
government's Bill on legislative provisions
and other measures to counteract violence against
women. The Bill was submitted to Parliament
in February, 1998. A decision by Parliament
is expected in May, 1998. The intention is
for the proposed legislative changes to enter
into force on 1 July 1998. The prohibition
on the purchase of sexual services is however
proposed to enter into force on 1 January 1999.
Sweden is by many regarded
as a society in which there is a relatively
high degree of equality between women and men.This
goes, for instance, concerning women's representation
in Government (50 per cent), in Parliament
(40 per cent), in County Councils (48 per cent)
and in Municipalities (41 per cent). Swedish
women also have a relatively high employment
rate (70 per cent) and thereby good possibilities
to support themselves. Both women and men have
ample possibilities to combine employment with
parental and household responsibilities.
In many areas, however, there
is a considerable imbalance in the power relations
between women and men. The most extreme example
of such an imbalance is the occurrence of men's
violence against women. Despite several measures,
particularly in recent years, thousands of
women in Sweden are subjected to violence.
Over the last decade, the number of reported
assaults and various forms of sexual offences
has increased markedly. Often, these offences
are committed by a man who has a close relationship
to the woman concerned (domestic violence).
Violence against women is
therefore an obstacle to the ongoing development
towards equality between women and men. Violence
against women is also a serious social problem.
To take action against this form of criminality
is thus a task which has been declared by the
government to be given priority in the criminal
justice system.
The government's Bill for
action against violence against women, deals
with a number of issues and entails three essential
points of departure:
Legislation is to be further
improved and made more rigorous Further preventive
measures are to be undertaken Women victims
are to be dealt with in better ways than
hitherto
In total, the government
is allocating SEK 41 million for 1998 for use
on a variety of measures. The proposals mean
that Sweden fulfils obligations arising from
the Fourth World Conference on Women, held
in Beijing in 1995. The government does however
not exclude that further measures may be called
for.
New
and more rigorous legislation
Gross
violation of a woman's integrity - a new
offence
A new offence is to be introduced into the Penal Code. Its purpose is
to deal with repeated punishable acts directed by men against women having
a close relationship with the perpetrator (gross violation of a woman's
integrity), but also covers children and other closely related persons
(gross violation of integrity).
In short, gross violation
of a woman's integrity, means the following.
If a man commits certain criminal acts (assault,
unlawful threat or coersion, sexual or other
molestation, sexual exploitation, etc) against
a woman to whom he is or has been married or
with whom he is or has been cohabiting, he
shall be sentenced for gross violation of the
woman's integrity, instead of for the crime
that each of the acts comprise. A necessary
condition for sentencing for the new offence
is that the acts were part of a repeated violation
of the woman's integrity and were suited to
seriously damage her self-confidence. The punishment
is imprisonment for at least six months and
at most six years.
Thereby, the new crime makes
it possible for the courts to increase the
penal value of the above mentioned acts, in
situations where they are part of a process
which constitutes a violation of integrity,
which is often the case with domestic violence.
It will thus also be possible, in a better
way than with present legislation, to take
the entire situation of the abused woman into
account. The new crime does not exclude that
the perpetrator simultaneously can be indicted
for, for instance, aggravated assault or rape.
The crime gross violation
of a person's integrity can be used in situations
equivalent to the ones above mentioned. However,
under this crime falls repeated violations
directed against children or other closely
related persons (such as parents and siblings
to the perpetrator). The punishment is the
same.
Definition
of rape to be widened
The provision of rape is widened so that sexual intercourse is to include
other sexual acts, if having regard to the nature of the violation and
other circumstances, the act in question is comparable to forced sexual
intercourse. This means that certain acts which under present legislation
are defined as sexual coercion, for example so-called fist-fucking, will
therewith be considered as rape.
Neglecting
to report certain sexual crimes to be made
punishable
Under certain circumstances, neglecting to report or otherwise reveal
gross sexual offences (rape, gross rape, gross sexual exploitation of
a minor or gross procuring) will be made punishable.
Prohibition
on the purchase of sexual services
Obtaining casual sexual services (prostitution) against payment is to
be prohibited. The punishment for this offence is to be fines or imprisonment
for up to six months. The attempted offence is also to be made punishable.
The offence comprises all forms of sexual services, whether they are
purchased on the street, in brothels, in so-called massage-institutes,
etc.
This new prohibition marks
Sweden's attitude towards prostitution. Prostitution
is not a desirable social phenomenon. The government
considers, however, that it is not reasonable
to punish the person who sells a sexual service.
In the majority of cases at least, this person
is a weaker partner who is exploited by those
who want only to satisfy their sexual drives.
It is also important to motivate
prostitutes to seek help to leave their way
of life. They should not run the risk of punishment
because they have been active as prostitutes.
By prohibiting the purchase
of sexual services, prostitution and its damaging
effects can be counteracted more effectively
than hitherto. The government is however of
the view that criminalisation can never be
more than a supplementary element in the efforts
to reduce prostitution and cannot be a substitute
for broader social exertions.
The government estimates
that the proposal will mean increased costs
for the police of the order of SEK 10 million
from the beginning of 1999 when the prohibition
is to enter into force.
Social
welfare legislation to be supplemented
The present social welfare legislation is to be supplemented by a new
provision which will mean that local social welfare services must act
to provide women, who are or have been exposed to violence or other abuse
in the home, with help and support in order to change their situation.
The responsibility of the
social services is made plain by this provision.
In consequence, the competence and readiness
of the social services to provide help and
support to women who have been subject to such
acts should be further developed.
The National Board of Health
and Welfare is also required to draw up general
guidelines for social work in the light of
the new provision.
Increased
punishment for genital mutilation
The term "genital mutilation" is to replace that of "circumcision" in
the law. The serious nature of the offence means that fines are to be
removed from the scale of punishment. The scale is also to be made more
rigorous by making imprisonment for at most four years the punishment
for the normal crime instead of the present two years. For the gross
form of the crime the minimum punishment is to be two years, instead
of one year as at present.
Preparation, conspiracy to
commit the offence, together with neglecting
to report or reveal genital mutilation is also
to become punishable. Furthermore, the government
has announced that an extension of the area
of criminal responsibility to comprise also
a person performing genital mutilation abroad,
will be considered later.
Provisions
on sexual harassment in working life to be
made more rigorous
In Sweden, the Equal Opportunities Act contains provisions concerning
equality between women and men in working life. This Act is made up of
two parts. The first part consists of provisions which makes it incumbent
upon an employer to take certain active measures in order to promote
equality at the work place. The employer who does not comply, runs the
risk of being ordered to do so under the penalty of a fine. The other
part of the Act consists of several provisions prohibiting discrimination
based on sex. The Equal Opportunities Ombudsman has the task of overseeing
compliance with the Act and can also bring cases of discrimination to
the Labour Court.
The government now proposes
that the present rules concerning sexual harassment
in the Act be strengthened. Firstly, a definition,
as follows, is to be inserted into the Act:
By sexual harassment is meant
unwelcome behaviour of a sexual nature or other
unwelcome behaviour based on sex, that violates
the employee's integrity at work.
The Act is also to be improved
so that it becomes fully evident that every
employer is obliged to take active measures
to prevent and hinder an employee from being
exposed to sexual harassment. The employer
must make clear in a general staff policy statement
that sexual harassment involving employees
cannot in any way be tolerated. This policy
must be made known to the employees. It is
equally important that routines are devised
for dealing with alleged or factual sexual
harassment. The employer who does not fulfil
his or her obligations run the risk of having
to do so under the penalty of a fine.
Furthermore, an employer
who receives information that an employee has
been exposed to sexual harassment by another
employee must investigate the circumstances
surrounding the alleged harassment. Where necessary,
the employer must take such steps as can be
reasonably required to prevent continued sexual
harassment. An employer who fails to fulfil
these obligations shall be liable to pay damages
to an injured employee. Damages shall be payable
for the violation which the neglect of required
measures occasioned.
Already under the present
Equal Opportunities Act, an employer may not
subject an employee to harassment because the
latter has rejected the employers sexual advances
or lodged a complaint about the employer for
sex discrimination. In cases where the employer
is the one sexually harassing an employee,
the rules in the Penal Code concerning molestation
or sexual molestation are applicable.
A
gender-neutral language in the Penal Code
In a number of the provisions on, inter alia, assault and sexual crimes
of the Penal Code, the words he, his or him are used to refer to persons
of both sexes. These words are to be modified in favour of expressions
such as his or hers or similar. The government attaches importance to
a gender neutral language as a whole in the Penal Code. Work on this
question is started by overhauling the chapters referred to and continue
as far as possible when the opportunity arises.
A
Law Commission on Sexual Offences to be set
up
The Law Commission, which will shortly be set up, is to undertake a complete
review of the provisions on sexual offences. A certain number of recently
rendered judgements concerning rape and sexual exploitation of young
women have attracted much attention. They have given rise inter alia
to questions about where the boundary lies between different offences
in chapter on sexual crimes in the Penal Code.
The Commission will also
be charged to examine to what extent the offence
of rape should focus on consent rather than
force. The provisions on rape in relation to
children will be reviewed. The Commission will
furthermore be required to undertake a study
of the courts' practice in the determination
of punishment and of the reasoning employed
about penal value where sexual offences are
concerned.
Preventive
Measures
Common
tasks to be undertaken by certain administrations
By special decision, the government charges certain administrations to
undertake common tasks concerning violence against women. The aim is
to give concrete expression to the administrations' responsibility and
duty to take appropriate measures on issues concerning violence against
women. The tasks concern the Office of the Prosecutor-General and all
prosecution administrations, the National Police Board and all police
administrations, the National Council for Crime Prevention, the National
Prison and Probation Administration, the Crime Victims Compensation and
Support Authority, the National Board of Health and Welfare, the county
councils and, in certain respects, the National Courts Administration.
Each of these administrations
is required to:
- increase its efforts to
prevent violence against women,
- draw up an action programme
or policy document for its work on this question,
- engage in mutual collaboration
with other administrations and with the relevant
voluntary organisations,
- follow international developments
concerning violence against women, and
- report regularly to the
government on the steps taken.
Certain administrations are
furthermore charged with specific tasks. Some
of these tasks are described later on in this
Fact Sheet.
Improved
statistics
The government believes it necessary to improve statistics on violence
against women. Current statistics, for example, contain no information
on the sex of victims, only on the perpetrator of various crimes. Nor
is it easy with the help of statistics to follow cases through the reporting
and investigating phases and on to the courts and the prison and probation
services.
The National Council for
Crime Prevention is currently working on an
improvement of the official crime statistics.
This will, inter alia, make it possible to
ascertain the sex of both perpetrator and victim,
the age of the latter and his or her relationship
with the perpetrator. The government is charging
the Council to complete this work speedily.
The government is also charging
the Office of the Public Prosecutor to present
regular reports on the number of restraining
orders issued and to make suggestions as to
how such statistics can be co-ordinated with
statistics concerning breaches of restraining
orders.
A
special research study
Official crime statistics on reported offences can never give a complete
picture of the scope of violence against women. A special research study
is necessary for an assessment of the true nature of this form of criminality
and the resources necessary to halt it.
Such a study, directed specifically
towards investigating the occurance of violence
against women, is now to be carried out. The
Crime Victims Compensation and Support Authority
has received the financial means for this purpose.
A
gender perspective in criminological research
Women's studies in Sweden and other countries
have contributed much to new knowledge on violence against women - its
causes and consequences. Criminological and legal research is however still
lacking a gender perspective.
The National Council for
Crime Prevention is a governmental expert body,
which works as a center for research and development
work in the field of crime prevention within
the judiciary and is also responsible for the
official crime statistics. The Council is now
charged inter alia to develop research on violence
against women as well as to incorporate a gender
perspective in its present research and development
work. This means inter alia that the Council
must set aside resources for method development,
and arrange for an increased exchange of information
with the women's studies.
An
inventory of police efforts
The National Police
Board is charged with making an inventory of efforts
made by the police concerning violence against
women and to report them to the government. The
inventory shall also include an investigation into
the extent to which correct and good information
is provided for victims of crime.
Electronic
monitoring to be studied
The National Council for Crime Prevention is charged with making a study
of the practical and technical conditions necessary for electronic monitoring
of men who breach a restraining order.
The increased risk of detection
which such a form of monitoring implies, can
have a deterrent effect as well as providing
greater security for the woman concerned. It
would also mean a limitiation of the freedom
of movement of the perpetrator, instead of,
as is often the case today, the woman bearing
the responsibility of reporting the breach
to the police. The setting up of such a project
necessitates however having reliable technology
and that the surveillance can be carried out
practically.
Development
work concerning violence against women and
prostitution
The National Board
of Health and Welfare is charged to undertake development
work on questions concerning violence against women
and on prostitution.
The work will seek to facilitate
the expansion of competence and improvement
of methods within the social and health services.
Included in this task is the initiation and
support of collaborative projects and of the
dissemination of information and the following
of international developments.
For the above mentioned tasks,
the National Board will be allocated extra
financial support for the period 1998-2000.
Thereafter, the tasks are to become a part
of the routine work of the National Board.
Treatment
methods for men are to be surveyed and evaluated
Increased attention must be given to those men who commit acts of violence
against women.
The National Prison and Probation
Administration is therefore charged, in consultation
with the National Board for Health and Social
Welfare, to survey existing methods of treatment
for men sentenced for violent offences against
women. Consideration shall also be given to
the need to provide more adequately for such
treatment. The result of the survey should
be reported at latest by 31 December 1998.
In order to ascertain what
methods are suitable and effective, the government
will also initiate and fund evaluation of existing
methods of treatment for men who commit violent
offences against women.
In the forthcoming evaluation
it will be especially important to direct attention
to the available international experience.
Knowledge of the causes of male violence against
women which has been acquired by women studies
in Sweden and other countries must obviously
be taken account of in such an evaluation.
A
national rapporteur on trafficking in women
The question of trafficking in women for the purposes of their sexual
exploitation, has been taken up in recent times by the European Union.
A national rapporteur on this question is recommended to be appointed
in all Member States, in accordance with a declaration signed jointly
by the Ministers of Justice and the Ministers of Equality Affairs.
The
National Police Board is charged with being
the national rapporteur for Sweden.
The
National Police Board shall inter alia collect
information on the extent of trafficking in
women in Sweden as well as between Sweden and
other countries, including outside of the European
Union, and consider how such trafficking can
be prevented and counteracted. It shall report
regularly to the government.
Information
to those seeking residence permits
Sweden has, in comparison with many other countries, far-reaching legislation
on violence and aggression against those in close relationship. Thus,
for example, it is forbidden for parents to physically punish their children
or treat them in humiliating fashion. Rape in marriage is also forbidden
and domestic violence can be indicted even if the victim has made no
formal accusation.
The Immigration Board will
now be charged with drawing up information
material on Swedish legislation relating to
violence in close relationships. This information
is to be disseminated among those seeking residence
permits in Sweden.
Support
for certain voluntary organisations
Men
The government considers it important to support preventive work among
men. In recent years, several men's organisations have been created
in Sweden for the purpose of helping and supporting men running
the risk of or having committed violent crimes against women. Among
these, emergency centres, run by men for men, and a Male Network
against Male Violence, can be mentioned. The government will now
allocate financial support to these organisations for projects
with the aim to further develop ways and means, including information,
to men about violence against women. The money will be allocated
after considering applications from the organisations concerned.
Youth
It is especially important to reach out to youth on questions concerning
violence against women. Funding will therefore be available for
projects that relate to, and are initiated by, young people and
there organisations on issues related to violence against women.
Immigrant
and disabled women
Organisations working on behalf of immigrant and disabled women will
also receive financial support for projects and other efforts in this
field.
Financial
contribution to the United Nations
The government will allocate around SEK 2 million to the UN Centre for
Human Rights and the Special Rapporteur on violence against women in
order to support the ongoing work concerning the human rights of women.
Improved
ways and means
of supporting women victims
Nation
wide further training for professional groups
Women victims must in the future be better understood and supported by
the professional groups with which, in various ways, they come in contact.
This can be achieved if personnel receive training in matters concerning
violence against women, the mechanisms behind this violence and on ways
and means to prevent it and support women victims of violence.
The government is therefore
charging the National Police Board, in consultation
with the National Courts Administration, the
Prosecutor-General and the National Board of
Health and Social Welfare, to carry out a nation
wide training at central, regional and local
levels. The training will be financed through
extra funding from the State Budget.
A similar training was last
carried out in 1992. Nearly 20,000 persons
from the criminal justice system and the social
welfare and health services took part. The
aim now is to bring about a more widespread
training with a larger number of participants
from the police, the prosecution, the social
services, etc. Training and information for
judges and lay judges will also be carried
out.
Further training must normally
be financed as part of an administration's
ordinary work. The government has announced
that this should be arranged in future on a
larger scale than has hitherto been the case.
Improved
professional education
Questions of gender equality and violence against women should be emphasised
in the education for professions in which the professional in question
come in contact with women who have been victims of gender-related violence.
It is a serious shortcoming that this is not the case today.
For this reason additions
will be made to the examination requirements
in the regulations governing college education
in respect of the following professions or
in the following professional /subjects:
Midwifery, child and youth
pedagogics, elementary school and high school
teachers, law, medicine, psychology, psychotherapy,
nursing, social care, social work, dentistry
and theology.
The police training already
today includes these issues.
The University College Administration
will be required to follow up and evaluate
the new regulations. During a three-year period
the Administration will follow up and evaluate
how the new regulations have come to influence
the teaching given. It is to report annually
to the government.
The
annual support for the women's shelters to
be increased
There are presently 131 local women's emergency shelters in Sweden. They
constitute a significant form of work to protect and help women subjected
to violence and their children. The shelters are organised in two national
umbrella organisations.
The available information
shows that the local shelters receive about
14,000 calls a year for help from women in
need. Approximately 1,500 women with their
children live in the overnight apartments possessed
by the shelters.
The shelters' national umbrella
organisations receive an annual organisational
support via the State budget. The local shelters
receive funding by the municipality in which
they are located, but the support varies from
municipality to municipality. They can also
receive State support for development work,
after application.
Over and above the present
financial help given, the State support to
the shelters will now increase. A further SEK
6 million will be made available to the shelters
and their umbrella organisations annually.
A
crisis telephone line for women victims
The local women's shelters today offer telephone advise and support.
A need for a national crisis telephone line, to further assist women
in crisis situations or in some other way in need of urgent advise, support
and help, has however been expressed. The telephone line should be open
around the clock.
The National Board for Health
and Social Welfare is therefore charged with
the task to speedily study how such a a central
crisis telephone line for women victims of
violence might be set up. The result of the
study is to be reported at latest by 1 July
1998 so that implemen-tation may be started
in short.
The
National Centre for battered and raped women
to receive additional support
The National Centre
for battered and raped women was set up in 1994
on the government's initiative. The government
also provided initial funding for the Centre, whose
activities fall under the auspices of the County
Council of Uppsala, north of Stockholm. The Centre
is attached to the Uppsala Academic hospital. Its
purpose is to provide medical examination, treatment
and support to women subjected to violence. Another
important task of the Centre is to develop research
and practical measures on ways and means with which
the health and medical system receives women subjected
to violence and to serve as a national resource
in these matters. The Centre therefore devotes
efforts to document and spread information on its
work methods to other regions in Sweden.
The Centre's activities to
develop routines and treatment methods within
the medical system is decisive for enabling
women subjected to violence to seek medical
advise or medical treatment. Therefore the
Centre will receive additional extra funding
for 1998. Funding of the Centre's activities
is otherwise a matter for the County Council.
Previous
measures to combat violence against women
Efforts to prevent and eliminate violence against women have had high
priority in Sweden in recent years and various measures have been implemented
to this end. They include preventive measures, stricter penalties, procedural
improvements and better support for women victims of violence.
Some
milestones
- 1965 Rape
in marriage is forbidden.
- 1982 Changes
in the rules concerning prosecution for battering
and rape so that prosecution no longer is
dependent on an accusation being made by
the person subjected to the offence. Anyone
who receives information about such an offence
can report it to the police, thus marking
that these offences are not a private matter
betweeen the parties involved.
- 1984 Reformation
of the sexual crimes in the Penal Code. The
definition of rape is widened to comprise
also oral and anal intercourse as well as
intercourse between homosexuals. In addition,
also men can be the victims of rape committed
by a female perpetrator. It is made clear
that the behaviour of the victim prior to
the rape is irrelevant. The provisions concerning
procuring are strengthened.
- 1988 Law
on Restraining orders is introduced in the
Penal code. This law has since been strenghtened.
The law is presently being subject to an
evaluation.
- The Injured Party's Counsel
Act is introduced. Under this Act the victim
of a crime of violence is entitled to free
legal counsel during police investigation
and trial. In 1991 and 1994 the possibilities
of getting free legal aid was extended. The
law is presently being subject to an evaluation.
- 1991 Rules
on sexual harassment in working life are
introduced in the Equal Opportunities Act.
- A nation wide training
of personnel in the judiciary, the social
services and the health care system is launched.
The training, with the purpose of increasing
the knowledge on issues related to violence
against women - its causes and consequences,
is given to appr. 20.000 persons.
- Projects are launched
for a better cooperation between the police,
the social services and other relevant parties
at regional level.
- Every police station in
Sweden is equipped with so called alarm kits
which can be given to threatened women free
of charge. These kits consist, inter alia,
of alarm systems for the home, mobile telephones
etc.
- The possibility for severely
threatened women to receive body guards,
free of charge, is introduced on a trial
basis. This possibility is now permanent.
- A Chair in sociology -
in particular violence against women - is
introduced at the university of Uppsala,
north of Stockholm, financed via the State
budget.
- 1993 The
punishment for battering, molestation, sexual
molestation and unlawful threat is increased.
- 1994 A
National Centre for raped and abused women
is set up. The aim is to receive and treat
women who are victims of abuse, rape etc.
and to contribute to a better treatment of
such patients within the health care system.
This means that the Centre is also involved
in development work, in research and in training
etc. The Centre is available around the clock.
- 1995 The
punishment for gross sexual exploitation
is increased. The definition of sexual molestation
is widened.
- 1998 The
government presents a Bill to Parliament
on violence against women. The Bill comprises,
inter alia, new legislation, changes in existing
legislation, measures for a more effective
work within the police, the prosecution and
the social services and increased financial
support to the shelters.
- 2002
Update:
The 1999 Swedish law prohibiting the "gross violation of a woman's
integrity" which includes prostitution, is at http://naring.regeringen.se/pressinfo/faktablad/PDF/n2001_038e.pdf
A 2001 summary of Swedish legislative reform regarding violence against
women is at http://naring.regeringen.se/pressinfo/faktablad/PDF/n2001_002e.pdf
Writings about Swedish legislation and social proposals which promote
equality between men and women are at http://www.naring.regeringen.se/inenglish/areas_of/equality.htm
The Swedish Minister for Gender Equality Affairs is at the Ministry
for Industry, Employment and Communications, Jakobsgatan 26, SE-103
33 Stockholm, Sweden
Tel +46 8 405 10 00
Fax+46 8 411 36 16
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