The Concept of Emergency in Finnish Emergency Legislation : An Analysis of Amendments to the Emergency Powers Act




Brunila, Tuukka

PublisherFaculty of law Lund University

2025

 Nordic journal of European law

8

4/2025

147

176

2003-1785

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.36969/njel.v8i4.28519

https://journals.lub.lu.se/njel/article/view/28519

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/508722857



In this article, I analyse the expansion of concept of emergency in the Finnish legal system by means of amending the Emergency Powers Act (1552/2011). The Act is the one of the main vehicles for regulating the use of emergency powers. The Act lists six distinct exceptional circumstances that authorise a state of emergency. Amendments to the Act have served to expand the definition of emergencies in the Constitution (Section 23) and the concept of emergency in general. By analysing the travaux préparatoires of relevant amendments, the focus is on the principles in expanding the concept. I argue that one of the main principles in developing the concept through legislation is preciseness. Emergencies should have to be defined by means of legislation as precisely as possible. In analysing the main principles in expanding the concept of emergency, this article seeks to also emphasise the tensions between these principles. As I will point out, sometimes preciseness is outweighed by the need to ensure that the Act accommodates all emergencies exhaustively.


Research has been funded by the Finnish Government as part of ‘The Lessons of the Pandemic Crisis’ -project (PAKO).


Last updated on 04/02/2026 09:28:11 AM