Swedish conflicts
Sweden seems like it has relatively no problems. It had neutrality during WWII, and you never hear anything about them on the news. Over the past twenty years, that may have been true, but recently there has been a sudden outburst of conflicts in the Swedish area.
Sweden has a problem with their work force.
Sweden has labor laws, which are somewhat questionable. The laws describe that anyone who has had a job for less than 6 months is the first one to be fired. In other terms, there is a "first come, first serve" attitude with cutting workers. This law, with the recent recession that effected everyone, had disastrous results on newly hired workers. No new or recently hired people could get jobs, which stopped them from getting other jobs, and so forth. This resulted in a discontent amongst young and jobless folk.
They have a problem in their immigration laws.
Immigration in Sweden over the past few years has changed. Originally, the laws were strict enough people out of the country. More recently, however, the laws have changed to allow free immigration into Sweden. With already low amounts of jobs available, immigrants became jobless and poor. This made already scarce jobs become almost impossible to acquire. Thus, immigrants were lain with the same discontent poor citizens of Sweden.
In the end, the two problems boil down to one huge conflict: poor versus rich. The rich want to keep job systems the same for profit, while the poor want to change the labor laws to be fair to newly employed workers than older ones. Neither side seems right, morally, and the government has so far not dealt with either mentality. In fact, many have resorted to violence. On May 13, 2013, there was a large riot in Stockholm, with rebel leaders claiming to be working for a solution to the job problem. The problem, hidden from public attention for years, only recently has come up because of the recent recession. So far, no solution seems to be surfacing.