The Dawn of Rights : Early Efforts to Promote Human Rights Education in Sweden 1948–1966
(2025) In Nordic Journal of Human Rights- Abstract
- This article explores efforts to integrate human rights into Swedish education during the early post-war era (1948–1966). Focusing on how human rights were conceptualized and justified, the study addresses a significant gap in the historiography of human rights education by investigating its development prior to the 1970s.
By examining materials from the National Board of Education, and the first textbook on human rights for Swedish schools, we begin by discussing the conceptualization of human rights in education. Special attention is given to the relationship between human rights, the United Nations, and the pursuit of peace. Second, we explore the spatial and temporal imaginings of human rights. Considering that Swedish legal... (More) - This article explores efforts to integrate human rights into Swedish education during the early post-war era (1948–1966). Focusing on how human rights were conceptualized and justified, the study addresses a significant gap in the historiography of human rights education by investigating its development prior to the 1970s.
By examining materials from the National Board of Education, and the first textbook on human rights for Swedish schools, we begin by discussing the conceptualization of human rights in education. Special attention is given to the relationship between human rights, the United Nations, and the pursuit of peace. Second, we explore the spatial and temporal imaginings of human rights. Considering that Swedish legal scholars viewed natural law as foreign to the Swedish legal tradition, we analyze how Swedish educators negotiated this challenge. Were human rights presented as a foreign novelty or as already realized in Swedish history? Finally, we discuss teaching practices and subject integration of human rights.
The findings reveal that education about human rights was deeply intertwined with United Nations initiatives, emphasizing peace and internationalism, but often framed as relevant primarily to ‘others’ in distant countries. Education about human rights was integrated into existing subjects rather than treated as a standalone subject, with age-appropriate methods encouraging active student participation. (Less) - Abstract (Swedish)
- This article explores efforts to integrate human rights into Swedish education during the early post-war era (1948–1966). Focusing on how human rights were conceptualized and justified, the study addresses a significant gap in the historiography of human rights education by investigating its development prior to the 1970s.
By examining materials from the National Board of Education, and the first textbook on human rights for Swedish schools, we begin by discussing the conceptualization of human rights in education. Special attention is given to the relationship between human rights, the United Nations, and the pursuit of peace. Second, we explore the spatial and temporal imaginings of human rights. Considering that Swedish legal... (More) - This article explores efforts to integrate human rights into Swedish education during the early post-war era (1948–1966). Focusing on how human rights were conceptualized and justified, the study addresses a significant gap in the historiography of human rights education by investigating its development prior to the 1970s.
By examining materials from the National Board of Education, and the first textbook on human rights for Swedish schools, we begin by discussing the conceptualization of human rights in education. Special attention is given to the relationship between human rights, the United Nations, and the pursuit of peace. Second, we explore the spatial and temporal imaginings of human rights. Considering that Swedish legal scholars viewed natural law as foreign to the Swedish legal tradition, we analyze how Swedish educators negotiated this challenge. Were human rights presented as a foreign novelty or as already realized in Swedish history? Finally, we discuss teaching practices and subject integration of human rights.
The findings reveal that education about human rights was deeply intertwined with United Nations initiatives, emphasizing peace and internationalism, but often framed as relevant primarily to ‘others’ in distant countries. Education about human rights was integrated into existing subjects rather than treated as a standalone subject, with age-appropriate methods encouraging active student participation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/b0a0c593-a503-4635-8006-b34e8a7bc0dc
- author
- Lundberg, Björn
LU
and Nilsson, Frida L
LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2025-12-15
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- epub
- subject
- keywords
- human rights education, history of human rights, UDHR, international understanding
- in
- Nordic Journal of Human Rights
- pages
- 20 pages
- publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- ISSN
- 1891-8131
- DOI
- 10.1080/18918131.2025.2592411
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b0a0c593-a503-4635-8006-b34e8a7bc0dc
- date added to LUP
- 2025-12-16 14:45:59
- date last changed
- 2025-12-18 14:16:43
@article{b0a0c593-a503-4635-8006-b34e8a7bc0dc,
abstract = {{This article explores efforts to integrate human rights into Swedish education during the early post-war era (1948–1966). Focusing on how human rights were conceptualized and justified, the study addresses a significant gap in the historiography of human rights education by investigating its development prior to the 1970s.<br/><br/>By examining materials from the National Board of Education, and the first textbook on human rights for Swedish schools, we begin by discussing the conceptualization of human rights in education. Special attention is given to the relationship between human rights, the United Nations, and the pursuit of peace. Second, we explore the spatial and temporal imaginings of human rights. Considering that Swedish legal scholars viewed natural law as foreign to the Swedish legal tradition, we analyze how Swedish educators negotiated this challenge. Were human rights presented as a foreign novelty or as already realized in Swedish history? Finally, we discuss teaching practices and subject integration of human rights.<br/><br/>The findings reveal that education about human rights was deeply intertwined with United Nations initiatives, emphasizing peace and internationalism, but often framed as relevant primarily to ‘others’ in distant countries. Education about human rights was integrated into existing subjects rather than treated as a standalone subject, with age-appropriate methods encouraging active student participation.}},
author = {{Lundberg, Björn and Nilsson, Frida L}},
issn = {{1891-8131}},
keywords = {{human rights education; history of human rights; UDHR; international understanding}},
language = {{eng}},
month = {{12}},
publisher = {{Taylor & Francis}},
series = {{Nordic Journal of Human Rights}},
title = {{The Dawn of Rights : Early Efforts to Promote Human Rights Education in Sweden 1948–1966}},
url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/18918131.2025.2592411}},
doi = {{10.1080/18918131.2025.2592411}},
year = {{2025}},
}