Rösträtt för kvinnor

"[1] The National Association for Women's Suffrage (Landsföreningen för kvinnans politiska rösträtt, LKPR) had been using the Fredrika Bremer Association's journal Dagny as a mouthpiece.

Cooperation between the two could be problematic at times; LKPR was against the fact that the editors of Dagny also allowed opponents of suffrage to publish in the journal.

The collaboration ended in 1911, and the following year LKPR published the first issue of Rösträtt för kvinnor.

[4] Most of the most prominent figures in the Swedish women's movement contributed articles, including Gulli Petrini, Anna Lindhagen, Ellen Key, Lydia Wahlström, Elsa Collin, Karolina Widerström, Anna Bugge-Wicksell, and Signe Bergman.

[5] The June 1919 issue was devoted entirely to suffrage reform and women's new role as citizens.

First page of the final issue in 1919, focusing entirely on women's newly won suffrage.