Home

säkerhetsskyddslagstiftning

Säkerhetsskyddslagstiftning refers to the set of Swedish laws that regulate security protection with the aim of safeguarding state, society and essential functions from espionage, sabotage and the improper disclosure of sensitive information. The central statute is Säkerhetsskyddslagen, enacted to establish a framework for how information and activities of national importance must be protected, including how risks are analyzed and mitigated.

Scope and objects: The legislation applies to public authorities, municipalities, and private entities that handle security-sensitive

Obligations and measures: Entities subject to the law must implement protective measures corresponding to identified risks,

Oversight and enforcement: Compliance is overseen by government authorities and national security bodies, with the authority

History and purpose: Adopted to strengthen protection of critical functions and security-relevant information, the law has

information
or
participate
in
operations
deemed
critical
to
national
security.
It
introduces
requirements
for
risk
assessments,
security
classifications,
and
the
development
of
security
plans.
The
regime
also
covers
personnel
security,
including
background
checks,
access
control,
and
handling
of
information,
as
well
as
physical
security
of
facilities
and
secure
storage
and
destruction
of
sensitive
materials.
When
a
private
actor
is
involved
in
security-critical
activities,
a
security
protection
agreement
(säkerhetsskyddsavtal)
may
be
mandated.
maintain
appropriate
classification
levels
for
information,
and
ensure
proper
training
and
procedures
for
staff.
Incidents
and
breaches
must
be
reported
to
the
relevant
authorities,
and
ongoing
audits
or
reviews
can
be
conducted
to
verify
compliance.
to
require
measures,
impose
sanctions,
or
terminate
contracts
in
cases
of
non-compliance.
The
legislation
interacts
with
related
legal
frameworks
governing
secrecy,
public
access
to
information,
and
information
security
standards.
been
amended
over
time
to
adapt
to
evolving
security
threats
and
international
cooperation
needs.