Politics of Sweden Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Popular government in Sweden rests upon ancient tradition. The Swedish Riksdag stems from the ancient court system used by all Germanic peoples -- the Ting (Eng. Thing) -- and the election of kings in the Viking age. The Government of Sweden is a limited constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system.
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2 Head of State 3 Government 4 Parliament 5 Judiciary 6 Administrative divisions 7 Foreign relations 8 See also 9 External Links 10 References |
King Carl XVI Gustav of the House of Bernadotte became king in 1973. His authority is formal, symbolic, and representational.
The executive authority of the government is vested in the cabinet, which consists of a Prime Minister and roughly 20 Ministers who run the government departments.
The unicameral Riksdag has 349 members, popularly elected every 4 years and is in session generally from September through mid-June.
Swedish law, drawing on Germanic, Roman, and Anglo-American law, is neither as codified as in France and other countries influenced by the Napoleonic Code, nor as dependent on judicial practice and precedents as in the United States.
This is an Article on Politics of Sweden. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Politics of Sweden Constitution
Main article: Constitution of SwedenHead of State
Main article: King of SwedenGovernment
Main article: Government of SwedenParliament
Main article: Parliament of SwedenJudiciary
Main article: Judiciary of SwedenAdministrative divisions
Main article: Counties of SwedenForeign relations
Main article: Foreign relations of SwedenSee also
External Links
References
