Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden

Historically, northern peripheries have been colonized in order to access northern resources. The use of these resources promised economic wealth and community development even in northern parts of the Scandinavian Peninsula (Sörlin, 1988). However, already in the late 19th century the Swedish Touri...

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Main Authors: Müller, Dieter, Byström, Joakim, Stjernström, Olof, Svensson, Daniel
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969
https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/510085
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spelling ftchalmersuniv:oai:research.chalmers.se:510085 2023-05-15T17:44:28+02:00 Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden Müller, Dieter Byström, Joakim Stjernström, Olof Svensson, Daniel 2019 text https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969 https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/510085 unknown http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969 https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/510085 Economic Geography History of Technology Human Geography 2019 ftchalmersuniv https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969 2022-12-11T07:16:00Z Historically, northern peripheries have been colonized in order to access northern resources. The use of these resources promised economic wealth and community development even in northern parts of the Scandinavian Peninsula (Sörlin, 1988). However, already in the late 19th century the Swedish Tourist Association started promoting the area as also being worth a visit (Aldskogius 1993). Still, tourism has developed slowly, and as an industry remained in the shadow of resource-extractive activities until the 1990s when automatization within resource industries, but also a general transition of the Swedish economy towards a domination of service industries, caused a search for alternative development options (Müller, 2011, 2013a). In this context, an abundant resource – a seemingly “pristine nature” or wilderness – is in focus and utilized as a resource for tourism development. Today, a renewed focus on the North, because of climate change and new industrial opportunities, is creating a discursive environment where ideas of the region as pristine and important for a global environment compete with the idea of a resource periphery. This development is cutting across scales, creating new stakeholder constellations, and globalizing the issue of northern development far beyond what has been witnessed to date.Against this background, the purpose of this chapter is to analyze tourism development in northern Sweden with regard to factors on different scales influencing the transition from a resource periphery to a pleasure periphery, and particularly the role of path dependence. This is achieved through a review of relevant literature and case studies conducted in the Swedish North. Other/Unknown Material Northern Sweden Chalmers University of Technology: Chalmers research Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. | Series: Transforming environmental politics and policy
institution Open Polar
collection Chalmers University of Technology: Chalmers research
op_collection_id ftchalmersuniv
language unknown
topic Economic Geography
History of Technology
Human Geography
spellingShingle Economic Geography
History of Technology
Human Geography
Müller, Dieter
Byström, Joakim
Stjernström, Olof
Svensson, Daniel
Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden
topic_facet Economic Geography
History of Technology
Human Geography
description Historically, northern peripheries have been colonized in order to access northern resources. The use of these resources promised economic wealth and community development even in northern parts of the Scandinavian Peninsula (Sörlin, 1988). However, already in the late 19th century the Swedish Tourist Association started promoting the area as also being worth a visit (Aldskogius 1993). Still, tourism has developed slowly, and as an industry remained in the shadow of resource-extractive activities until the 1990s when automatization within resource industries, but also a general transition of the Swedish economy towards a domination of service industries, caused a search for alternative development options (Müller, 2011, 2013a). In this context, an abundant resource – a seemingly “pristine nature” or wilderness – is in focus and utilized as a resource for tourism development. Today, a renewed focus on the North, because of climate change and new industrial opportunities, is creating a discursive environment where ideas of the region as pristine and important for a global environment compete with the idea of a resource periphery. This development is cutting across scales, creating new stakeholder constellations, and globalizing the issue of northern development far beyond what has been witnessed to date.Against this background, the purpose of this chapter is to analyze tourism development in northern Sweden with regard to factors on different scales influencing the transition from a resource periphery to a pleasure periphery, and particularly the role of path dependence. This is achieved through a review of relevant literature and case studies conducted in the Swedish North.
author Müller, Dieter
Byström, Joakim
Stjernström, Olof
Svensson, Daniel
author_facet Müller, Dieter
Byström, Joakim
Stjernström, Olof
Svensson, Daniel
author_sort Müller, Dieter
title Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden
title_short Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden
title_full Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden
title_fullStr Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Making "Wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern Sweden
title_sort making "wilderness" in a northern natural resource periphery: on restructuring and the production of a pleasure periphery in northern sweden
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969
https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/510085
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969
https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/510085
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315174969
op_publisher_place Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. | Series: Transforming environmental politics and policy
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