State Institute for Racial Biology
The State Institute for Racial Biology (SIRB, Swedish: Statens institut för rasbiologi, SIFR) was a Swedish governmental research institute founded in 1922 with the stated purpose of studying eugenics and human genetics. It was the most prominent institution for the study of "racial science" in Sweden.[1] It was located in Uppsala. In 1958, it was renamed to the State Institute for Human Genetics[2] (Institutionen för medicinisk genetik) and is today incorporated as a department of Uppsala University.
The institute's first head was Herman Lundborg. He retired in 1935. He was succeeded by Gunnar Dahlberg.[1] An early research priority was studying the commonness of the "Nordic" racial traits in the Swedish population and the alleged downsides of race-mixing between the majority population and the Sámi people.[1] In the years 1936–1960, the majority of research projects at SIRB concerned medical genetics but racial science was still an important aspect of the institute.[1]
History
After its founding in 1922, it continued under the leadership of Herman Lundborg. In 1926, studies conducted by the institute provided a basis for Lundborg's upper secondary school textbook Swedish Racial Studies. However, Lundborg became increasingly anti-semitic which put him at odds with the Swedish Government during a time when tensions were growing between Sweden and Germany. In 1936, he was replaced by Gunnar Dahlberg. In 1959 it was integrated into Uppsala University, and is today the university's genetic center.
The official assignment of the Swedish institute was to study the inhabitants of the country from a racial perspective. They studied the life conditions and environmental developments of different families. They tried to explain the effect biological heritage and the environment has on people. They also studied mental illnesses, alcoholism and criminality.
Svenska sällskapet för rashygien (Swedish Society for Eugenics) was founded in 1909 and paved the way for SIRB. Its mission statement was to study eugenics. Svenska sällskapet för rashygien, and eugenics in general, didn’t gain ground until after World War I. In 1918 the society travelled around Sweden with an exhibit called “Folktyputställning” ("Exhibition about types of people"). The same year Frithiof Lennmalm, the headmaster of Karolinska Institutet proposed that the Nobel Foundation finance an institute for race biology. The Nobel committee for medicine voted unanimously in favour of the proposal. The staff of Karolinska Institutet voted against it with a very thin margin (9 against 8). Instead it was proposed that the Swedish state found and finance such an institute.
References
- Ericsson, Martin (2020-06-30). "What happened to 'race' in race biology? The Swedish State Institute for Race Biology, 1936−1960". Scandinavian Journal of History. 0 (0): 1–24. doi:10.1080/03468755.2020.1778520. ISSN 0346-8755.
- According to the title page of the dissertation of Lars Beckman A Contribution to the Physical Anthropology and Population Genetics of Sweden: Variations of the ABO, Rh, MN and P Blood Groups. Hereditas (Lund), ISSN 0018-0661 ; 45(1959) the name of the institute in 1959 was The State Institute for Human Genetics and not the Institute for Medical Genetics.