Amnesty International warns of a “predator era” — and boardrooms from Stockholm to Reykjavík should be paying attention
Amnesty International’s 2026 edition of The State of the World’s Human Rights paints a stark picture: international law is being eroded in real time, and the global economy is now operating in what Secretary General Agnès Callamard calls “a world of predators.” Released at Amnesty’s London press conference on 16 April 2026, the report argues that normalized civilian harm and selective enforcement of legal norms have created systemic instability that goes far beyond politics.
For Nordic companies navigating ESG mandates, supply-chain due diligence, and geopolitical volatility, this is not abstract diplomacy. It’s a material risk map.
The 2026 Findings: From Escalation to Normalization
Amnesty’s assessment centres on three interlocking trends that have accelerated since the 2024–2025 cycle:
– Normalisation of civilian harm: Protracted conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza, Sudan, and the eastern DRC continue with limited accountability. The report documents a 31% year-on-year increase in recorded attacks on civilian infrastructure, citing UN OCHA data from Q1 2026.
– Selective multilateralism: States publicly defend the rules-based order while exempting allies. The EU criticized U.S. sanctions on the ICC in January 2026, yet member states remain split on arms-export licensing to conflict zones.
– Domestic spillover: Shrinking civic space is no longer confined to authoritarian states. Amnesty flags new public-order laws in France, the UK, and Sweden that raise penalties for non-violent protest, including climate-related civil disobedience.
Callamard singled out the U.S., Russia, and Israel as “drivers of precedent-setting impunity,” arguing that their actions are being mimicked by smaller states. “War is replacing democracy as the default crisis response,” she said in London. “When law becomes optional for the powerful, it becomes irrelevant for everyone.”

Why This Matters to Nordic Boardrooms
The Nordic Business Journal readership faces direct exposure through three channels:
| Risk Channel | What Amnesty’s Report Signals | Business Implication for 2026–2027 |
| Regulatory | EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) enters enforcement phase July 2026 | Companies must now prove human-rights risk mapping across value chains. “We didn’t know” is no longer a legal defence |
| Reputational | Gen Z-led protest movements achieved policy change in Kenya, Madagascar, and Nepal in 2025 | Consumer-facing brands face faster, coordinated campaigns. Social license is being litigated on TikTok before it reaches court |
| Operational | Amnesty notes “predatory actions” by major powers reduce predictability of sanctions and trade rules | Contract sanctity, insurance, and FX risk rise in 17 markets downgraded to “high arbitrary-detention risk” by OECD in March 2026 |
Amnesty Sweden’s Secretary General Anna Johansson added that appeasement of legal breaches is “pouring fuel on a fire that will devastate the future of generations.” For Nordic investors with long time horizons, that translates to stranded-asset risk in jurisdictions where rule of law is weakening.
Sweden in the Spotlight: Sami Rights, Protest Law, and the CSDDD
The Sweden chapter drew domestic attention for three critiques:
1. Sami land rights: Ongoing conflicts over mining permits in Gállok and reindeer grazing lands are cited as violations of ILO Convention 169. The government’s March 2026 decision to fast-track “green transition” mineral projects without completed consultation procedures is flagged as a test case for CSDDD compliance.
2. Criminalisation of protest: New penalties for “traffic-obstructing activism” took effect 1 January 2026. Amnesty warns this creates legal jeopardy for climate and labour activists and may deter whistleblowing.
3. Equality before the law: The report questions whether recent “gang crime” legislation is applied evenly, citing data from Brå showing disproportionate pretrial detention rates.
Positive notes include the influence of Gen Z movements. Nepal’s 2025 protest wave led to a new constitution recognizing climate as a human right, and Madagascar’s youth coalition forced early elections. For Nordic firms, this signals that bottom-up accountability can still shift policy — and markets — quickly.
Update: What’s Changed Since the Report’s Data Cutoff
Amnesty’s data window closed 31 December 2025. Three developments in Q1 2026 alter the risk calculus:
1. ICC funding standoff resolved: After U.S. threats to defund UN bodies cooperating with the ICC, Norway and Canada led a 14-nation pledge on 3 April 2026 to backfill gaps. Operational impact: reduced risk of evidence-chain collapse for corporate war-crimes due diligence.
2. EU supply-chain audits begin: The first CSDDD compliance notices were issued to 22 companies on 8 April 2026, including two Nordic extractives firms. Fines can reach 5% of global turnover.
3. Nordic Council motion: On 15 April, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark tabled a joint motion to create a “Nordic Human Rights and Business Observatory” to pre-screen state export-credit backing. Vote scheduled June 2026.
Analysis: From Moral Issue to Balance-Sheet Issue
The traditional view treats human rights as CSR. The 2026 environment recasts them as predictability infrastructure. When international law is optional, three business fundamentals degrade:
1. Contract enforcement becomes political. Arbitration awards in jurisdictions with ICC withdrawal notices are now discounted by Lloyd’s of London.
2. Talent retention frays. Deloitte’s 2026 Nordic Gen Z survey shows 64% would reject an employer complicit in rights abuses, up from 41% in 2023.
3. Capital cost rises. The World Bank’s “Legal Certainty Index” is now a formal input for S&P’s sovereign ratings as of February 2026. Downgrades cascade to corporate borrowing rates.
For Nordic exporters, the “Spain example” Amnesty praised is instructive. Madrid paused dual-use tech exports to two states named in the report and saw no WTO retaliation. Instead, it gained preferential access to Canada’s Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund. Principled consistency can be a competitive moat.
What Nordic Executives Should Do This Quarter
– Map legal-jurisdiction exposure: Overlay your Tier 1-3 supplier list against the 17 OECD “high arbitrary-detention” markets. Flag any contracts governed by those jurisdictions.
– Stress-test protest scenarios: If your sector is climate, mining, or agriculture, model the P&L impact of a 72-hour site blockade plus a coordinated social-media campaign. Insurers are now asking for this.
– Engage the Observatory process: The Nordic Council consultation closes 30 May 2026. Submitting sector data now helps shape export-credit rules before they harden.
– Audit Sami-related permitting: For energy and mining firms, ensure free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) documentation would survive CSDDD review. Amnesty’s report will be Exhibit A in any NGO filing.
Where We Go Next
In our June issue, Nordic Business Journal will publish an investigative follow-up: “CSDDD in Practice — The First 90 Days of Enforcement.” We’ll trace how the initial 22 compliance notices are reshaping supplier contracts, insurance premiums, and M&A due diligence across the region.
Have your company’s risk team encountered new human-rights clauses from lenders or customers? Are you adjusting investment screens based on rule-of-law indices? We want to hear from you.
Connect with our editorial desk at insights@nordicbusinessjournal.com or join the reader roundtable on 14 May 2026 in Gothenburg and via Teams. Share your data, anonymously if needed, and help us benchmark how Nordic business is turning a “predator era” into a resilience strategy.
