Intra-minority welfare in the post-war period: new expertise on private and public solutions to Finland-Swedish population and welfare problems

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Abstract

This article introduces the concept of intra-minority welfare and investigates the formation of intra-minority welfare in the post-war period by focusing on the Swedish-speaking minority in Finland, the Finland-Swedes. The post-war era saw a rapid decline in both the percentage of Swedish speakers in Finland and their political influence. To tackle these issues, new organizations were formed to boost the birth rate and secure the welfare of the Finland-Swedish minority. With the expansion of the welfare state, a new generation of Finland-Swedish experts within the fields of social work and demographics also played a prominent role in the intra-minority debate on how public welfare could cater to different segments of the minority. In the article the authors focus on the work conducted in connection to the organizations Svenska Befolkningsförbundet i Finland (The Swedish Population Federation in Finland) and Kårkulla vårdanstalt för sinnesslöa (Kårkulla Care Institution for the Mentally Deficient). By analysing material produced by or about the organizations and experts who worked within them from the 1940s to 1960, they demonstrate how ideas and practices around intra-minority welfare, in particular the demographic future of the Finland-Swedes and care for vulnerable members of the minority, were conceptualized and framed in the post-war period.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)269-289
JournalEuropean Review of History / Revue européenne d'histoire
Volume31
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Mar 2024
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Funding

This article is based upon work from COST Action CA 18119 \u2018Who Cares in Europe?\u2019, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology.), www.cost.eu. The article is a part of the research project \u2018Minoritetsv\u00E4lf\u00E4rd och reproduktion: Professionaliseringen av den finlandssvenska befolkningsfr\u00E5gan 1945\u20131990 (MOR)\u2019, funded by the Society of Swedish Literature in Finland and the Swedish Cultural Foundation in Finland. We thank COST Action CA 18119 Who Cares in Europe? for initiating this special issue. We also thank the editors and authors of the special issue for their comments during the different workshops we have had over the years. Finally, we thank the anonymous peer reviewers as well as our colleague Jutta Ahlbeck for valuable feedback and support.

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