Älvdalen secures sixth place in UNICEF child ranking

Älvdalen municipality has reached sixth place nationally in a UNICEF ranking of the best places for children and young people to grow up. The success stems from targeted investments in culture and high teacher density in schools.

Älvdalen municipality ranks highest in Dalarna county and among the top ten in Sweden when UNICEF compares municipalities' economic investments in children. The municipality also secures an impressive sixth place nationally in the broader ranking of places where children and young people can grow up.

The success is linked to deliberate investments in culture and high teacher density in the schools. One of Dalarna's smaller municipalities thus outperforms several larger ones in the county.

The compilation shows that Älvdalen not only leads at the county level but also achieves a strong national position.

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Illustration of Region Dalarna council allocating 30 million SEK to child psychiatry, showing politicians debating budget with symbolic care elements.
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Region Dalarna allocates up to 30 million SEK to child psychiatry for 2026

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Region Dalarna's regional council has decided to allocate up to 30 million kronor extra to the care choice for child and youth psychiatry (BUP) in 2026. The investment aims to retain care providers. The opposition warns that the funds will not solve the root problems.

The share of children and youth in Uppsala has increased most in the municipality's weakest and strongest residential areas between 2017 and 2024, while decreasing in middle areas. The change is most pronounced among primary school children. Over 60 percent of areas have seen a decline in child share since 2017.

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Despite declining child numbers in Dalarna, preschool groups are often larger than recommended. Fresh figures from Skolverket, presented by Sveriges Lärare, show that 48 percent of age-segregated groups in the county exceed the guidelines. Ludvika stands out with particularly large groups.

Two prominent politicians in Älvdalen, one from the Moderates and one from the Social Democrats, have left their parties to join the Left Party ahead of the autumn municipal election. The move strengthens the Left Party locally. Dissatisfaction over the treatment of the northern districts Särna and Idre prompted the switch.

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In Knivsta, first-time voters make up eight percent of the electorate for the election in six months, according to preliminary figures from Statistics Sweden. The municipality ranks fifth among Swedish municipalities, following Danderyd, Lomma, Salem, and Ekerö. The rising share of young voters challenges parties to tailor their policies and outreach.

One in five young adults aged 20 to 27 in Dalarna still live with their parents due to housing shortages. Nine out of ten of these young people want to move out on their own. SVT Nyheter Dalarna reports on the challenges facing youth in the housing market.

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Despite increased national investments in road maintenance, the share of state roads in very poor condition in Dalarna has risen slightly to 16.5 percent over the past year. This emerges from a new analysis by Transportföretagen. The analysis also highlights major deficiencies in the county's culverts.

 

 

 

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