Från kolonisation till gruvexploatering

Nature is found at the centre of important placemaking processes in northern Sweden today. One example is conflicting discourses surrounding mining exploitations in reindeer herding areas. In this article, we discuss these processes in the light of the settler colonisation during approximately 1750–...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Kulturella Perspektiv – Svensk etnologisk tidskrift
Main Authors: Daniel Andersson, Coppélie Cocq
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Danish
English
Norwegian
Swedish
Published: Föreningen Kulturella Perspektiv 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.54807/kp.v25.18358
https://doaj.org/article/970fc4305d5a409988fc29a714f6ae24
Description
Summary:Nature is found at the centre of important placemaking processes in northern Sweden today. One example is conflicting discourses surrounding mining exploitations in reindeer herding areas. In this article, we discuss these processes in the light of the settler colonisation during approximately 1750–1850. Then, as well as now, a resource perspective on nature positions different ways of living of the lands against each other. Although the Swedish state in some regards have been replaced by global corporations, and the local people that are against the mines also turn the struggle to a global level, the situation today bears much in common with what happened during the colonisation in 18th and 19th centuries. We argue that a deeper understanding of contemporary processes – and their historical contexts – is needed in order to prevent conflicts and tensions between groups of people.