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Flag of the Nordic Council Foundation
President
Director (Secretariat) 1952
Ole Stavad
Frida NokkenFoundation
Chairman
General Secretary (Secretariat) 1971
Heidi Grande Røys
Per Unckel
Working languages Danish
Norwegian
Swedish
Seat Copenhagen
Nordic Council:

Nordic Council of Ministers:

Area
 - Members
 - With Greenland
Ranked 19th
1,318,412 km²
3,493,000 km² (7th)¹
Population
 - Total
 - Density
Ranked 45th
24,299,610
18.7/km² (6.9/km²)¹
Currencies Danish krone
Norwegian krone
Icelandic króna
Swedish krona
Faroese króna
Euro
Time zone UTC 0 to +2 (-3)¹
¹ Including Greenland

The Nordic Council and the Nordic Council of Ministers is a cooperation forum for the Parliaments and 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 labour market, social security, and free movement across borders without passports for the countries' citizens.

Membership


Members of the Council:

Nations:

Autonomous territories:

  • (Denmark)
  • (Denmark)
  • (Finland)

In addition, Estonia has expressed its wishes to apply for membership in the Council. Estonia already has Nordic Council offices and information points in five of its cities. Also there are two Nordic Council offices in Northwestern Russia (in Saint Petersburg and Kaliningrad).

The Faroe Islands have expressed their wishes for full membership in the Nordic council instead of the current associate membership. This would lead to sessions being held in the Faroes, the presidency of the council routinely being held by the Faroes and the Faroes paying their share of the councils expenses.The Broad Agreement - Faroese coalition paper and Call for meeting on full membership for the Faroe

Organization


The Nordic Council and the Council of Ministers have offices in Copenhagen and various installations in each separate country, as well as many offices in neighbouring countries. 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 and Finland and Sweden being neutral, the Nordic Council has not been involved in any military cooperation.

The Nordic Council uses the three Continental-Scandinavian languages (Danish, Norwegian and Swedish) as its official working languages, however it publishes material in Finnish, Icelandic and English, as well *.

The original Nordic Council concentrates on inter-parliamentary co-operation. The Nordic Council of Ministers, founded in 1971, is responsible for inter-governmental co-operation.

Alternative projects and plans


Sweden and Finland joined the European Union in 1995. Norway has still not joined, twice rejecting an offer of membership through a national referendum. Icelandic and Faroese public opinions are both solidly against EU membership.

References


See also


External links


Nordic countries | International organizations

Consell Nòrdic | Severská rada | Nordisk Råd | Nordischer Rat | Consejo Nórdico | Conseil nordique | Nordijsko vijeće | Norðurlandaráð | Consiglio Nordico | המועצה הנורדית | Šiaurės Taryba | Noordse Raad | 北欧理事会 | Nordisk Råd | Nordisk Råd | Rada Nordycka | Нордијски Савет | Pohjoismaiden neuvosto | Nordiska rådet | Hội đồng Bắc Âu | 北欧理事会

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Nordic Council".

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