Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land

The IPY EALÁT project (EALÁT: Reindeer herding, traditional knowledge, adaptation to climate change and loss of grazing land) was designed to gather information about the environmental changes which Arctic reindeer herders are facing and to give concrete examples of herders’ traditional knowledge le...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Magga, Ole Henrik, Mathiesen, Svein D., Corell, Robert W., Oskal, Anders
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Arctic Council's Sustainable Development Working Group 2009
Subjects:
IPY
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11374/43
id ftarcticcouncil:oai:oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/43
record_format openpolar
spelling ftarcticcouncil:oai:oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/43 2023-05-15T14:30:53+02:00 Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land Magga, Ole Henrik Mathiesen, Svein D. Corell, Robert W. Oskal, Anders 2009 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11374/43 en eng Arctic Council's Sustainable Development Working Group http://hdl.handle.net/11374/43 Reindeer herding Traditional Knowledge Adaptation Summary Report 2009 ftarcticcouncil 2022-12-19T09:49:03Z The IPY EALÁT project (EALÁT: Reindeer herding, traditional knowledge, adaptation to climate change and loss of grazing land) was designed to gather information about the environmental changes which Arctic reindeer herders are facing and to give concrete examples of herders’ traditional knowledge leading their adaptation to changing conditions, e.g. traditional uses of grazing land. In all, 21 workshops have been held in local herding communities in the reindeer herding regions of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia in 2007–2011 and recently in Canada. The challenge of EALÁT is to transfer herders’ knowledge into action for sustainable development of the rapidly changing Arctic. The legacy of IPY EALÁT work has therefore developed into local information centers for different types of reindeer husbandry in Russia, as well as the UArctic EALÁT Institute - University of the Arctic Institute for Circumpolar of Reindeer Husbandry. This report is produced for the 7th Arctic Council Ministerial Meeting in Nuuk, Greenland, as a Sustainable Development Working Group (SDWG) executive summary report. The report builds on information collected during IPY EALÁT including the community-based workshops, and includes key findings and recommendations. The report also is based on the IPY EALÁT scientific report (Magga, Mathiesen, Corell and Oskal in prep.). A 30-minute documentary EALÁT movie is produced and delivered with this report The Arctic is the home of indigenous peoples like reindeer herders and is now changing rapidly. The ambition of EALÁT and this report is to contribute to increased cooperation between Arctic nation states and indigenous peoples to secure future sustainable development in circumpolar north and maintain a highly resilient society for reindeer herders. Arctic Council's Sustainable Development Working Group Other/Unknown Material Arctic Council Arctic Climate change Greenland IPY Nuuk reindeer husbandry The Arctic Institute UArctic University of the Arctic Arctic Council Repository Arctic Canada Greenland Magga ENVELOPE(27.800,27.800,68.100,68.100) Norway Nuuk ENVELOPE(-52.150,-52.150,68.717,68.717)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Council Repository
op_collection_id ftarcticcouncil
language English
topic Reindeer herding
Traditional Knowledge
Adaptation
spellingShingle Reindeer herding
Traditional Knowledge
Adaptation
Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land
topic_facet Reindeer herding
Traditional Knowledge
Adaptation
description The IPY EALÁT project (EALÁT: Reindeer herding, traditional knowledge, adaptation to climate change and loss of grazing land) was designed to gather information about the environmental changes which Arctic reindeer herders are facing and to give concrete examples of herders’ traditional knowledge leading their adaptation to changing conditions, e.g. traditional uses of grazing land. In all, 21 workshops have been held in local herding communities in the reindeer herding regions of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia in 2007–2011 and recently in Canada. The challenge of EALÁT is to transfer herders’ knowledge into action for sustainable development of the rapidly changing Arctic. The legacy of IPY EALÁT work has therefore developed into local information centers for different types of reindeer husbandry in Russia, as well as the UArctic EALÁT Institute - University of the Arctic Institute for Circumpolar of Reindeer Husbandry. This report is produced for the 7th Arctic Council Ministerial Meeting in Nuuk, Greenland, as a Sustainable Development Working Group (SDWG) executive summary report. The report builds on information collected during IPY EALÁT including the community-based workshops, and includes key findings and recommendations. The report also is based on the IPY EALÁT scientific report (Magga, Mathiesen, Corell and Oskal in prep.). A 30-minute documentary EALÁT movie is produced and delivered with this report The Arctic is the home of indigenous peoples like reindeer herders and is now changing rapidly. The ambition of EALÁT and this report is to contribute to increased cooperation between Arctic nation states and indigenous peoples to secure future sustainable development in circumpolar north and maintain a highly resilient society for reindeer herders. Arctic Council's Sustainable Development Working Group
author2 Magga, Ole Henrik
Mathiesen, Svein D.
Corell, Robert W.
Oskal, Anders
format Other/Unknown Material
title Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land
title_short Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land
title_full Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land
title_fullStr Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land
title_full_unstemmed Reindeer Herding, Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation to Climate Change and Loss of Grazing Land
title_sort reindeer herding, traditional knowledge, adaptation to climate change and loss of grazing land
publisher Arctic Council's Sustainable Development Working Group
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/11374/43
long_lat ENVELOPE(27.800,27.800,68.100,68.100)
ENVELOPE(-52.150,-52.150,68.717,68.717)
geographic Arctic
Canada
Greenland
Magga
Norway
Nuuk
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Greenland
Magga
Norway
Nuuk
genre Arctic Council
Arctic
Climate change
Greenland
IPY
Nuuk
reindeer husbandry
The Arctic Institute
UArctic
University of the Arctic
genre_facet Arctic Council
Arctic
Climate change
Greenland
IPY
Nuuk
reindeer husbandry
The Arctic Institute
UArctic
University of the Arctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11374/43
_version_ 1766304669503586304