Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q10706877> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 36 of
36
with 100 triples per page.
- Q10706877 subject Q5906624.
- Q10706877 subject Q6119142.
- Q10706877 subject Q7066381.
- Q10706877 subject Q7216203.
- Q10706877 subject Q8136187.
- Q10706877 subject Q8173834.
- Q10706877 subject Q8202012.
- Q10706877 subject Q8377760.
- Q10706877 subject Q8519883.
- Q10706877 subject Q8653412.
- Q10706877 subject Q8769942.
- Q10706877 subject Q8817875.
- Q10706877 abstract "Compulsory sterilisation in Sweden (Swedish: Tvångssterilisering i Sverige) occurred between 1934 and 1975. It was never legal to physically restrain the patient. Between 1973 and 2012 sterilisation was a condition for sex change.Originally the aim of the sterilisation policy was to protect society and it targeted the so called feeble-minded or other individuals who were considered unfit. This practice peaked in the mid 1940s. In 1944 85 % of the sterilisations were performed on eugenic grounds. From the 1950s and onwards the law came to be used mostly in the interest of the individual, for social or medical reasons, under varying degrees of pressure from doctors and social workers.According to the 2000 governmental report, 21,000 were estimated to have been forcibly sterilised, 6,000 were coerced into a 'voluntary' sterilisation while the nature of a further 4,000 cases could not be determined. The Swedish state subsequently paid out damages to victims who contacted the authorities and asked for compensation.There were three indications for sterilisation:Medical if a pregnancy could seriously put a woman suffering from chronic illness or permanently weakened constitution at risk of life and health.Eugenic indication meant sterilisation could be done if a person's offspring would receive undesired genes for insanity, severe illness or physical handicap of other kind.Social indication allowed sterilisation for someone evidently unsuitable to foster a child due to mental illness, being feebleminded or other distortion of the psyche, or having an asocial lifestyle.In 1922 the State Institute of Racial Biology was founded in Uppsala. In the 1930s, a law legitimized forced sterilization of thousands. Another law, passed in 1941, was more far reaching, included a social indication and did not include any age of consent limit.From 1944, the number of eugenic sterilizations under the 1941 legal provisions gradually decreased.In Sweden, sterilization was only mandatory before sex change. This last mandatory sterilization has been criticized by several political parties in Sweden and since 2011 the Parliament of Sweden was expected to change the law but ran into opposition from the Christian Democrat party. After efforts to overturn the law failed in parliament, the Stockholm Administrative Court of Appeal overturned the law Dec. 19, declaring it unconstitutional after the law was challenged by an unidentified plaintiff.".
- Q10706877 thumbnail Sterilizations.svg?width=300.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q1140579.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q170480.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q272930.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q512554.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q5867833.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q5906624.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q6119142.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q7066381.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q706716.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q7216203.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8136187.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8173834.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8202012.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8377760.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8519883.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8653412.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8769942.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8817875.
- Q10706877 wikiPageWikiLink Q957260.
- Q10706877 comment "Compulsory sterilisation in Sweden (Swedish: Tvångssterilisering i Sverige) occurred between 1934 and 1975. It was never legal to physically restrain the patient. Between 1973 and 2012 sterilisation was a condition for sex change.Originally the aim of the sterilisation policy was to protect society and it targeted the so called feeble-minded or other individuals who were considered unfit. This practice peaked in the mid 1940s.".
- Q10706877 label "Compulsory sterilisation in Sweden".
- Q10706877 depiction Sterilizations.svg.