Sonja Branting-Westerståhl


Sonja Branting-Westerståhl was a Swedish lawyer and politician. She was one of the first female lawyers in Sweden and specialised in matrimonial law. A social democrat, she was active in raising awareness of the rise of far-right politics in 1930s and 1940s. In 1948, she served in the lower house of the Riksdag, the Swedish Parliament, for a short period.

Early life

Sonja Branting was born on 15 September 1890, the second child of Hjalmar Branting and Anna Branting (née Jäderin

Career

After initially working for the Stockholm city legal aid office, Branting-Westerståhl started a practice with her husband in 1927. She developed a specialism in matrimonial disputes and, in 1930, was appointed an advokat by the city.
Alongside her legal career, Branting-Westerståhl also followed in her parents' footsteps and was politically active, particularly around women's issues. She was a long-standing member of the Swedish Social Democratic Party which had been co-founded by her father and, between 1936 and 1952, served as a member of the executive board of the Social Democrat Women's Organisation.
During the 1930s, Branting-Westerståhl was very active in raising awareness of the risk of nazism, including touring the United States in 1935 to speak out about the threat of totalitarianism and campaigning against the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. She also campaigned on behalf of those suffering during the Spanish Civil War and inspected refugee camps in France and Africa as international delegate.
After the war, she continued to be politically active and briefly sat in the Andra kammaren for the Social Democrats in 1948.

Selected works

Branting-Westerståhl married Olof Westerståhl in 1914. They had one child, Jörgen, who became a political scientist. Her husband died in 1948. Branting-Westerståhl died in 1981.