Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use

This paper is a case study of the use of cultural experts, broadly defined as including mediators and academicians with a variety of backgrounds, in Sweden. It draws on data collected through qualitative interviews with cultural experts, by following court cases through legal documents, mass media a...

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Main Author: Annika Rabo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Laws
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/8/3/22
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spelling doaj-3eb69b7b2b294b0da333d035ecaac1bf2020-11-25T01:30:59ZengMDPI AGLaws2075-471X2019-09-01832210.3390/laws8030022laws8030022Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its UseAnnika Rabo0Department of Social Anthropology, Stockholm University, 10691 Stockholm, SwedenThis paper is a case study of the use of cultural experts, broadly defined as including mediators and academicians with a variety of backgrounds, in Sweden. It draws on data collected through qualitative interviews with cultural experts, by following court cases through legal documents, mass media and other printed material, and by my own experience as a cultural expert. The paper provides a context to the potential application of the concept of cultural expertise regarding the appointment of such experts by lawyers, prosecutors and courts. It analyzes cases concerning the Sami, the Roma and recent immigrants from Africa and Asia. The Sami cases revolve around conflicts with the Swedish state over rights and ownership. The Roma cases revolve around questions of ethnic discrimination. Cases of immigrants from outside Europe consist of individual criminal cases and asylum. I argue that Swedish ideas—and ideals—of sameness and equality have had an impact on the legal cases that I discuss in this paper. While the legal issues in each of these cases differ, the paper argues that they demonstrate a similarity in how Swedish-majority society manages and even creates cultural differences. I conclude by showing the ways culture, rights, and obligations are understood in courts reflect mainstream trends of Swedish society and suggest the need for cultural expertise in the form of interdisciplinary collaboration.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/8/3/22expertscultural expertscourt casesSwedenSamiRomaimmigrants
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annika Rabo
spellingShingle Annika Rabo
Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use
Laws
experts
cultural experts
court cases
Sweden
Sami
Roma
immigrants
author_facet Annika Rabo
author_sort Annika Rabo
title Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use
title_short Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use
title_full Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use
title_fullStr Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use
title_full_unstemmed Cultural Expertise in Sweden: A History of Its Use
title_sort cultural expertise in sweden: a history of its use
publisher MDPI AG
series Laws
issn 2075-471X
publishDate 2019-09-01
description This paper is a case study of the use of cultural experts, broadly defined as including mediators and academicians with a variety of backgrounds, in Sweden. It draws on data collected through qualitative interviews with cultural experts, by following court cases through legal documents, mass media and other printed material, and by my own experience as a cultural expert. The paper provides a context to the potential application of the concept of cultural expertise regarding the appointment of such experts by lawyers, prosecutors and courts. It analyzes cases concerning the Sami, the Roma and recent immigrants from Africa and Asia. The Sami cases revolve around conflicts with the Swedish state over rights and ownership. The Roma cases revolve around questions of ethnic discrimination. Cases of immigrants from outside Europe consist of individual criminal cases and asylum. I argue that Swedish ideas—and ideals—of sameness and equality have had an impact on the legal cases that I discuss in this paper. While the legal issues in each of these cases differ, the paper argues that they demonstrate a similarity in how Swedish-majority society manages and even creates cultural differences. I conclude by showing the ways culture, rights, and obligations are understood in courts reflect mainstream trends of Swedish society and suggest the need for cultural expertise in the form of interdisciplinary collaboration.
topic experts
cultural experts
court cases
Sweden
Sami
Roma
immigrants
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/8/3/22
work_keys_str_mv AT annikarabo culturalexpertiseinswedenahistoryofitsuse
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