I think it was interesting that the brochure is apparently available in English, Swedish and something called "Easy Swedish". I'm not sure exactly what this is and a brief Googling didn't help, but I'm imagining something like "Basic English", that is a simplified version of the language designed to be easy to read for people learning the language.
Full list of languages (names are in Swedish) reads:
Arabiska
Engelska
Farsi
Finska
Meänkieli
Nordsamiska
Polska
Romani Chib
Somaliska
Svenska
Sydsamiska
Ukrainska
so quite a few more varaiants than what you would expect from knowing Sweden has five official minority languages.
Compare to Finland - which has universal male conscription (Sweden does not), and allows women to serve in all combat arms.
(Per Wikipedia, Sweden's military has Reserves of 34,000. Vs. Finland's has Reserves of 870,000. Even though Finland's total population is a bit over 1/2 of Sweden's.)
I like how the section on finding shelter tells you things you can do rather than things you shouldn’t do.
Instead of “take shelter indoors” they say “if you’re outside, hide in a ditch” and then further down talk about progressively better options for taking shelter should any of the above not apply. It feels positive, practical, and deliberate.
Also, ahem, the use of a sans-serif face for sidebars mixed with serif body text really heightens the sense of imminent global catastrophe!
I wonder if there is one single book/pdf that has consolidated all vital information needed in such scenarios. i.e. if you were to be stranded on a deserted island and could have one book, which book would that be?
If you were going to be stranded in Northern Australia you'd likely prefer the Australian Army Bush Tucker Guide maps - topo maps with routes, springs, etc. marked and a food guide on the back showing edible resources by map grid.
If you're making a brochure to go out to the whole population of a country, keep it simple and straightforward even if that means oversimplifying the advice a bit.
I've wondered about that. Any major crisis is going to last much longer than a week. Will having a week's supplies really make a difference? Maybe it will lead to a slight staggering of refugee movement. I can't help thinking it's nearly in the same category of advice as "duck and cover".
1 week of supplies is more about flexibility. In survival situations once things get bad they snowball. People aren’t going do drop dead on day 8, but think of it as having a week to prepare for a known disaster before you need to worry about the basic necessities. 6 months is hypothetically better but far more expensive and it would only make an actual difference in a tiny number of situations.
Further it’s fairly trivial to cycle through a week of supplies and keep it fresh. Looking at the shelf life of what you regularly consume, find stuff that lasts a while, get a little extra, and then keep restocking as you normally would after that point. Just remember first in first out.
PS: It’s honestly surprising how long some stuff lasts, honey in an unopened glass container is going to be good long after you’ve died of old age.
There's a lot of governmental preparedness in place with a response time of say 2-10 days (depending on specifics). The idea is to carry over until communal response kicks up and starts working; not to hole up in the woods by yourself for months, that's an Americanism. Nordics are not like the US; there's no separate paid military, everyone is part of defense, and all crisis planning is about defense in depth, which includes protecting civilian infrastructure.
To give an idea of the amount of preplanning and resources to be deployed in the timescale of days: I'm part of the Finnish reserve. When I was younger, if called upon, I would have been deployed in my pre-assigned, pre-planned, military position of defending a major branch of nearby industry within 48 hours, with a task force of some two dozen people fully geared up and under my command. There's literal warehouses very near population centers to quickly hand out weapons to the early response groups. Main force activation happens on the timeline of a handful of days, staggered largely based on age so youngest most combat-ready first and older people in coming weeks or months. Every reservist has been pre-assigned a role and where to show up in case of crisis (whether they know it or not).
yeah, I kinda wondered if personal economics played into it. like if you're in debt and low income, having 7 days of supplies in advanced is already a big ask.
You also might not have the space in your home to store that much too.
The executive government decides and make an announcement like most other places?
A crisis is more complicated because that power is derogated to very local levels: for example each individual school has a crisis plan they can activate when they think it's necessary.
In practice the brochure is mostly about big crises you can sort of see coming, so it'll either be obvious because you house is on fire/under water, or it'll be on the news. In either case "a crisis" is not really a legal concept but rather an organisational one, more precisely it means "you did make a plan for this like you are required to, right?"
> The executive government decides and make an announcement like most other places?
I don't know where you live, but this is a terrible metric in america. We shredded libya without most people even realizing anything was going on. Libya never recovered. Similar story with syria. Similar story with iraq.
I suppose the media actually covered aspects of our most recent invasion of iraq.
If you fail to notice it through the news, and other official channels, then there's usually a very loud siren that's hard to ignore telling you there's a major danger near you in most countries.
If I had to guess in a case of an official declaration of war those would be activated all over the country for at least a day (probably more)