@article{Ekholst_2021, title={The Value of a Thumb: Injuries and Disability in Swedish Medieval Law}, volume={20}, url={https://journal.fi/mirator/article/view/91931}, abstractNote={<p>This article analyses provisions dealing with bodily injuries in Swedish medieval law. It argues that the lawmakers defined impairment as a permanent injury, something that could only be assessed after a year had passed. The article further argues that the legislators conceptualized disability as the permanent consequences of an injury that would affect a person’s life. It suggests that the legislators considered that an impairment had become a disability when the person could no longer feed themselves, walk, attend church or go to the market. Finally, while an impairment was paid for with a specific ‘impairment fine’, and thus must have been perceived as something negative that needed compensation, there is nothing in the law texts that indicates that a person with a disability was viewed in negative light in general.</p>}, number={2}, journal={Mirator}, author={Ekholst, Christine}, year={2021}, month={maalis}, pages={38–53} }