Encyclopedia > Nordic Council

  Article Content

Nordic Council

The Nordic Council and the Nordic Council of Ministers is a cooperation forum for the governments of the Nordic countries. It was established following World War II and its first concrete results was the introduction in 1952 of a common labor market, social security, and free movement across borders without passports for the countries' citizens.

The Nordic Council has offices in Copenhagen and various installations in each separate country. The council does not have any formal power on its own, but each government has to implement any decisions through its country's legislative assembly (parliament). With Denmark, Norway, and Iceland being members of NATO, Sweden being neutral, and Finland having had cooperation treaties with then Soviet Union, the Nordic Council has not been involved any military cooperation.

Nordic Council uses currently Swedish as its working language, but has plans to change it to English as Baltic States (especially Estonia) may want join to it. The other reason is that other than Swedish officials do speak better English than Swedish today.

In the 1960s there were plans to develop the Nordic cooperation into an organisation similar to the European Economic Community. A treaty was negotiated to establish a new organisation, NordEk[?] headquartered in Malmö. Though ultimately it was the case that Finland did not dare to ratify the treaty due to its special relationship to the Soviet Union. Without Finland the idea was defunct, and Norway and Denmark chose to apply for membership in the EEC. Denmark became a member of the EEC in 1973, but Norway rejected accession in the same year, in a referendum. Sweden did not apply due to its non alliance policy, which was aimed at preserving neutrality.

See also: Scandinavian defence union[?]

External links



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Great River, New York

... are 509 households out of which 41.5% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 70.9% are married couples living together, 7.3% have a female householder with no ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 30.3 ms