Turn left for Murmansk: ‘Fourth World’ transculturalism and its cultural ecological framing

In this paper we review briefly histories and ideologies underlying multiculturalism in Nordic countries, highlighting tensions between integrationist and inclusive approaches. We propose a cultural ecological framework through which we discuss the possibility of a transculturalism based on Fourth W...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Patrick Dillon, Phil Bayliss, Linda Bayliss
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Lapland 2014
Subjects:
G
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/43603a276e6545da808a29dfe87f296d
Description
Summary:In this paper we review briefly histories and ideologies underlying multiculturalism in Nordic countries, highlighting tensions between integrationist and inclusive approaches. We propose a cultural ecological framework through which we discuss the possibility of a transculturalism based on Fourth World engagement with the environment. Cultural ecology is about the reciprocal interactions and transactions between people and their environments. The Fourth World is a circum-global, pan-arctic region which includes the northern parts of some Nordic countries. We argue that whether or not there is a distinctively Nordic version of multiculturalism, Nordic countries have access to Fourth World ways of engaging with the environment which transcend notions of inter- and multiculturalism and the ideological tensions associated with them.