Industrial development in the North - Sámi interests squeezed between globalization and tradition
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22891Date
2020-04-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
In this article, we analyse tensions in Sámi local communities
meeting new industrial development. Indigenous communities
experience outmigration and are in need of new business
development and employment. Global extractive companies may
offer new jobs, but the type and scale of these jobs put pressure
on traditional indigenous livelihoods. The study underlines the
importance of two core ideal type Sámi positions – traditionalist
and modernist – on future industrial development in rural Sámi
areas in Norway. These positions are playing themselves out in
different ways by the most important Sámi institutions; The Sámi
Parliament (Sámediggi), The Finnmark Estate (FeFo) and Sámipopulated municipalities. The result is a deep-going institutional
conflict around industrial development, making it very difficult to
find compromises. To shed light on these conflicts and their
implications, we analyse how different positions are institutionally
visible in the ongoing battle concerning the Nussir mining case in
the Sámi municipality Kvalsund in Northern Norway.
Publisher
RoutledgeCitation
Angell E, Nygaard V, Selle P. Industrial development in the North - Sámi interests squeezed between globalization and tradition. Acta Borealia. 2020;37:43-62Metadata
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