1 December 1919; 105 years ago (1919-12-01) Volume 8, number 15
Country
Sweden
Based in
Stockholm
Language
Swedish
Rösträtt för kvinnor ('Suffrage for Women') was a journal published by the Swedish National Association for Women's Suffrage. It was first published in 1912 and the last issue was published in 1919, when the Riksdag (Swedish Parliament) decided to extend universal suffrage to men and women. The journal's motto was: "We can never do as much for a great cause as a great cause can do for us."[1]
History
The National Association for Women's Suffrage (Landsföreningen för kvinnans politiska rösträtt, LKPR) had been using the Fredrika Bremer Association's journal Dagny as a mouthpiece. Cooperation between the two could be problematic at times; LKPR was against the fact that the editors of Dagny also allowed opponents of suffrage to publish in the journal. The collaboration ended in 1911, and the following year LKPR published the first issue of Rösträtt för kvinnor.[2]
Eight years after the journal's launch, in May 1919, Parliament voted to extend the right to vote to women.[5] The June 1919 issue was devoted entirely to suffrage reform and women's new role as citizens. The last issue of the journal was published in December 1919.