In the last century, the treatment of victims of involuntary
sterilisation and castration in Nordic countries has varied drastically
from state-to-state, across time and victim groups. Considering why this
is the case, Daniela Alaattinoğlu investigates how laws and practices of
involuntary, surgical sterilisation and castration have been
established, abolished and remedied in three Nordic states: Sweden,
Norway and Finland. Employing a vast range of primary and secondary
sources, Alaattinoğlu traces the national and international developments
of the last 100 years. Developing the concept of grievance formation,
the book explores why some states have claimed public responsibility
while others have not, and why some victim groups have mobilised while
others have remained silent. Through this pioneering analysis,
Alaattinoğlu illuminates issues of human and constitutional rights, the
evolution of the welfare state and state responsibility in both a
national and global context.