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Swedish Women's Lobby
Organization in Sweden From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Swedish Women's Lobby (Swedish: Sveriges Kvinnoorganisationer; formerly Sveriges Kvinnolobby) (SWL) is a Swedish gender-critical organization that describes itself as a non-partisan and non-denominational independent umbrella organization for the Swedish women’s movement. It has increasingly represented what academics describe as gender-critical, anti-gender and trans-exclusionary positions,[1][2][3][4][5] and in 2025 it launched the international NGO Women's Platform for Action International (WoPAI) to promote "sex-based rights" and oppose what they call a "pro-gender movement", a "queer agenda" and the concept of gender identity.[6] WoPAI is hosted by SWL and shares its address;[7] SWL's secretary-general Susannah Sjöberg is also the inaugural secretary-general of WoPAI, while former SWL chair Gertrud Åström was its inaugural chair.[8] In a joint statement, SWL and WoPAI opposed the inclusion of trans women—whom they referred to as "males who do not wish to be treated in law and practice as men"—in analyses of violence against women.[9] WoPAI board member Anna Kerr presented her lecture "Did Freemasonry have a role in the roots of the trans movement?" in May 2025.[10] In August 2025, SWL also founded MOTERIS, which also includes other gender-critical organizations and which states that it promotes "sex-based rights."[11] The Report on violence and pathways to violence in anti-gender campaigns, published by the European Commission, identifed several of SWL's member organizations as part of a growing anti-gender landscape in Sweden.[12] Gender studies scholars Karlberg, Korolczuk and Sältenberg argued that the rise of gender-critical and anti-trans rhetoric in Sweden, including that promoted by SWL, is part of a broader process of "insidious de-democratization," which they describe as a set of discourses and practices that erode liberal democracy by marginalizing already vulnerable groups.[1]
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History
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Originally named Samverkansforum för Kvinnor i Sverige (English: Forum for the Cooperation of Women in Sweden), the SWL was founded in 1997, based on the model of the European Women's Lobby (EWL) on the EU level.[13]
The SWL’s work in based on the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the Beijing Declaration and Sweden’s national gender equality goals. The lobby gathers 57 member organizations[14] with the mutual aim to achieve women’s full human rights and a gender equal society, and is the Swedish national coordination of the European Women’s Lobby.[15]
The SWL annually analyzes the state budget bill, as well as local and regional budgets, from a gender equality perspective. It conveys the network Lön hela dagen[16] for gender equal pay, and runs the initiative Reklamera[17] against sexist advertising. The SWL has an abolitionist stance on all forms of trafficking in women, meaning that it advocates the abolition of prostitution,[18] pornography[19] and gestational surrogacy.[20]
Every year, the SWL organizes Forum Jämställdhet,[21] Sweden’s largest gender equality conference. The SWL has consultative status at the United Nations Economic and Social Council, and annually represents its member organizations at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.[22]
Susannah Sjöberg became secretary-general in 2025.[23]
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Views on transgender people
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SWL's views on transgender people have evolved significantly. A 2015 report on their website, that offered guidance for feminist organizing, emphasized the importance of actively working against cissexism and ensuring inclusion of trans and queer people. It pointed out that individuals who do not conform to the binary gender norm have long struggled to find space within the feminist movement, and that it is essential to combat both the discrimination they face and the ignorance that often underlies it. The report defined "not recognizing other gender identities or gender expressions than man and woman, or not taking transgender people's gender identity or gender expression seriously" as a form of transphobia.[24] In 2015, SWL was among five organizations that called for public funding to be withheld from religious communities that allow "discrimination against women, homophobia, transphobia or gender apartheid."[25]
Since the late 2010s, scholars and activists in Sweden have increasingly noted SWL’s turn toward gender-critical positions and its adoption of trans-exclusionary views and policies.[2][1][3][5][4] In 2018, thirteen Swedish gender studies academics criticized SWL for its trans-exclusionary positions, particularly its opposition to proposed legal reforms intended to improve the lives of transgender people. Writing in Feministiskt Perspektiv, the scholars accused SWL of spreading misinformation and reproducing a binary, heteronormative, and trans-exclusionary conception of gender. They warned that SWL’s rhetoric not only marginalized trans and nonbinary people, but also distorted the meaning of feminist and intersectional equality work in Sweden. They called on SWL to adopt a more solidaristic approach and to engage seriously with up-to-date knowledge on trans issues, rather than echoing misleading narratives associated with broader anti-trans discourse.[5]
A turning point came in 2019, when SWL denied board candidacy to Signe Krantz, a 20-year-old transgender woman representing the member organization Maktsalongen. SWL conducted an unauthorized inquiry into her legal gender, sparking outrage from civil society and the National Council of Swedish Children and Youth Organisations (LSU). Maktsalongen withdrew in protest, and LSU condemned SWL’s actions as "offensive" and "directly transphobic" in an open letter.[4][26][27][28] In 2021, 943 priests and employees of the Church of Sweden condemned "trans-exclusionary feminism [that] uses rhetoric we recognize from radical right-wing Christian groups and right-wing populists," adding: "We mourn a rights movement that punches down. You, me, we, all of us, need a broad, solidarity-based feminism that fights restrictive gender norms."[29]
In 2020, gender studies scholars Alm and Engebretsen highlighted SWL’s promotion of gender-critical ideas as part of what they described as "a key issue in the current political and scholarly landscape (...) the growing convergence, and sometimes conscious alliances, between 'gender-critical' feminists (sometimes known as TERFs – Trans-Exclusionary Radical Feminists), religious and social conservatives, as well as right-wing politics and even neo-Nazi and fascist movements."[2] In a talk to Women's Declaration International (WDI) in 2020, WDI's Swedish country contact Fanny Knyphausen said WDI and the Swedish Women's Lobby were the main organizations opposing gender self-determination in Sweden, and that "the Swedish Women's Lobby had a really big loss of organizations" that left the organization as a result of its anti-trans policies.[30] In 2024 SWL opposed the Gender Recognition Act, aligning with the Sweden Democrats and Christian Democrats.[1] Gender studies scholars Michal Grahn and Malin Holm argued that SWL’s claims that the Gender Recognition Act would endanger "women’s rights" and allow "men" to access "women-only spaces" closely mirrored the "threat to women" narratives employed in anti-trans rhetoric across other national contexts.[3] In 2024, SWL accused "progressive parties and movements" of working against women.[31] Gender studies scholars Karlberg, Korolczuk and Sältenberg argued that the rise of gender-critical and anti-trans rhetoric in Sweden, including that promoted by SWL, is part of a broader process of "insidious de-democratization," which they describe as a set of discourses and practices that erode liberal democracy by marginalizing already vulnerable groups.[1] This shift aligns with what Claire House has identified as a broader international trend beginning in the mid-2010s, where (radical) feminist actors increasingly participate in anti-gender and regressive politics, often with particularly harmful consequences for trans rights, a trend she illustrates, in part, by referencing Alm and Engebretsen’s discussion of developments in Sweden and the case of SWL.[32]
In her book Gender Ideology, Social Contagion, and the Making of a Transgender Generation, gender-critical writer Dianna Kenny lists the Swedish Women's Lobby as a group opposing gender-affirming care alongside Women's Declaration International, Moms for Liberty, Gays Against Groomers, Genspect, Sex Matters, and Transgender Trend.[33]
In 2025, SWL launched an international umbrella organization, the Women's Platform for Action International (WoPAI), which states that it promotes "sex-based rights" and opposes what it calls a "pro-gender movement" in academia and NGOs, "large civil society organizations that claim to be feminist" and "queer, postmodern, or neoliberal agendas of liberal and leftist origin" as well as "non-legal and not agreed upon by the international community concepts of 'gender identity'".[6] It brings together groups including Women's Declaration International,[8] whose Swedish branch XXantippas Vrede is also a member of SWL.[34] SWL's secretary-general Susannah Sjöberg is the inaugural secretary-general of WoPAI, while former SWL chair Gertrud Åström was its inaugural chair.[8][35] WoPAI shares SWL's address[7][36] and lists Gertrud Åström, Anna Zobnina, and Susannah Sjöberg as its legal representatives as of 2025.[36] WoPAI's first action was an open letter of support for Reem Alsalem in response to the criticism of her by many women's organizations, that WoPAI claimed was a "campaign [...] supported by powerful foundations such as Gates, Open Society and Ford."[35] The organization has also voiced its support for a recent UK court ruling that defines women strictly as biological females, stating, "The UK Supreme Court knows what a woman is," and urging other countries to follow suit.[37] WoPAI board member Anna Kerr presented her lecture "Did Freemasonry have a role in the roots of the trans movement?" in May 2025.[10]
In July 2025, SWL together with WoPAI and the European Network of Migrant Women, issued a joint statement in support of Reem Alsalem and her report "Sex-based violence against women and girls,"[9] amid strong criticism of the report from international human rights groups such as Amnesty. The report called on states to "ensure that the terms 'women' and 'girls' are only used to describe biological females and that such a meaning is recognised in law," referred to trans women as "males who identify as women or girls" and called for a ban on legal and social gender transition for children.[38] SWL and WoPAI referred to trans women as "males who do not wish to be treated in law and practice as men" and opposed their inclusion in analyses of violence against women, accused states and UN agencies of "redefining [women] out of legal existence," called women a "sex class," and denounced "exclusion, harassment, and professional retaliation" faced by those "who advocate for [...] sex-based rights," whom they said are met with "institutional power and public vilification."[9]
The Report on violence and pathways to violence in anti-gender campaigns, published by the European Commission and part of the EU-funded research project Co-Creating Inclusive Intersectional Democratic Spaces Across Europe, discussed several of SWL's member organizations as part of an anti-gender landscape in Sweden, noting that Sweden has seen "a gradual rise in anti-gender discourses between 2015 and 2023," and that also "self-described 'gender-critical feminists'" such as WDI and Women's Rights Watch challenge feminist expertise and engage in attacks on gender studies and scholars.[12]
In August 2025 SWL also founded "MOTERIS Protecting the Civic Space of Women and Girls," which states that it promotes "sex-based rights." It is led by SWL and includes other gender-critical organizations in other countries.[11][39]
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Presidents
- Gunvor Ngarambe 1997–2009
- Gertrud Åström 2009–2015
- Clara Berglund 2015–2016
- Anna Giotas Sandquist 2016–2022
- Susannah Sjöberg 2022–2024
- Hanna Carlsson Kota 2025–
See also
References
External links
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