Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study

"During the last decades the Saami reindeer production system has gone trough a transition from a mainly subsistence based pastoralism towards a market integrated industry. The development has been clearly different in the central North Saami reindeer districts in Finnmark compared to South Saa...

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Main Authors: Riseth, Jan Åge, Vatn, Arild
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10535/607
id ftdlc:oai:http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu:10535/607
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spelling ftdlc:oai:http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu:10535/607 2023-05-15T16:13:46+02:00 Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study Riseth, Jan Åge Vatn, Arild Europe Norway 1995 http://hdl.handle.net/10535/607 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10535/607 Reinventing the Commons, the Fifth Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property May 24-28, 1995 Bodoe, Norway pastoralism sustainability indigenous institutions property rights common pool resources reindeer Land Tenure & Use Wildlife Conference Paper 1995 ftdlc 2021-03-11T16:15:57Z "During the last decades the Saami reindeer production system has gone trough a transition from a mainly subsistence based pastoralism towards a market integrated industry. The development has been clearly different in the central North Saami reindeer districts in Finnmark compared to South Saami districts in Troendelag. The former seems to be in a rather severe ecologic, economic and social crisis due to overgrazing while the latter seem to be rather well adapted to pasture resources and get well off economically. "The paper outlines the main differences in development in the two regions and discusses a set of explanations. We are mainly focusing on the following dimensions: (1) internal factors: ecology , culture and institutions; (2) exogenous pressure: market integration, general social processes and public policy. Generally the traditional common property system seems to be to unsuited to handle the new situation . In the North we observe rising conflicts and undermined old common institutions while in the South institutional innovation have made it possible to cope with new challenges. "Three relations seem to be of special significance when explaining the different development paths. Firstly, differences in size and openness seem to have equipped the two societies with unequal capabilities to handle the transition in mode of production. Secondly, the transition has developed at a different pace in the two areas. Thirdly public policy did not sufficiently take into consideration the different situation in the two regions. "In the North, as a result of the national integration of the local Saami society a set of exogenous forces seem to have put the established norms and rules under pressure. Processes like becoming sedentary, market integration and mechanisation challenged existing norms as they also increased costs. While productivity stayed rather unchanged, the overall result was a need for enlarging the number of reindeer. Public subsidies seem to have accelerated a spiral of investment in reindeer." Conference Object Finnmark saami Finnmark Indiana University: Digital Library of the Commons (DLC) Handle The ENVELOPE(161.983,161.983,-78.000,-78.000) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Indiana University: Digital Library of the Commons (DLC)
op_collection_id ftdlc
language unknown
topic pastoralism
sustainability
indigenous institutions
property rights
common pool resources
reindeer
Land Tenure & Use
Wildlife
spellingShingle pastoralism
sustainability
indigenous institutions
property rights
common pool resources
reindeer
Land Tenure & Use
Wildlife
Riseth, Jan Åge
Vatn, Arild
Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study
topic_facet pastoralism
sustainability
indigenous institutions
property rights
common pool resources
reindeer
Land Tenure & Use
Wildlife
description "During the last decades the Saami reindeer production system has gone trough a transition from a mainly subsistence based pastoralism towards a market integrated industry. The development has been clearly different in the central North Saami reindeer districts in Finnmark compared to South Saami districts in Troendelag. The former seems to be in a rather severe ecologic, economic and social crisis due to overgrazing while the latter seem to be rather well adapted to pasture resources and get well off economically. "The paper outlines the main differences in development in the two regions and discusses a set of explanations. We are mainly focusing on the following dimensions: (1) internal factors: ecology , culture and institutions; (2) exogenous pressure: market integration, general social processes and public policy. Generally the traditional common property system seems to be to unsuited to handle the new situation . In the North we observe rising conflicts and undermined old common institutions while in the South institutional innovation have made it possible to cope with new challenges. "Three relations seem to be of special significance when explaining the different development paths. Firstly, differences in size and openness seem to have equipped the two societies with unequal capabilities to handle the transition in mode of production. Secondly, the transition has developed at a different pace in the two areas. Thirdly public policy did not sufficiently take into consideration the different situation in the two regions. "In the North, as a result of the national integration of the local Saami society a set of exogenous forces seem to have put the established norms and rules under pressure. Processes like becoming sedentary, market integration and mechanisation challenged existing norms as they also increased costs. While productivity stayed rather unchanged, the overall result was a need for enlarging the number of reindeer. Public subsidies seem to have accelerated a spiral of investment in reindeer."
format Conference Object
author Riseth, Jan Åge
Vatn, Arild
author_facet Riseth, Jan Åge
Vatn, Arild
author_sort Riseth, Jan Åge
title Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study
title_short Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study
title_full Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study
title_fullStr Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study
title_full_unstemmed Development of Property Regimes and Institutional Structure for Sustainability in the Saami Reindeer Industry in Norway: A Comparative Study
title_sort development of property regimes and institutional structure for sustainability in the saami reindeer industry in norway: a comparative study
publishDate 1995
url http://hdl.handle.net/10535/607
op_coverage Europe
Norway
long_lat ENVELOPE(161.983,161.983,-78.000,-78.000)
geographic Handle The
Norway
geographic_facet Handle The
Norway
genre Finnmark
saami
Finnmark
genre_facet Finnmark
saami
Finnmark
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10535/607
Reinventing the Commons, the Fifth Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property
May 24-28, 1995
Bodoe, Norway
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