Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden

The Sami in Sweden have lived on and managed their lands since time immemorial. The strong connection to the environment and nature has given them centuries of knowledge that is still applicable to this day. With the help of their ancestral knowledge the Sami have preserved their Indigenous land. Wi...

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Main Authors: Håkansson, Louise, Lundberg, Amanda
Format: Bachelor Thesis
Language:English
Published: Jönköping University, Högskolan för lärande och kommunikation 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-57217
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spelling ftjoenkoepinguni:oai:DiVA.org:hj-57217 2023-05-15T18:10:13+02:00 Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden Hållbarhet för vem? : En studie om samiska perspektiv på inkludering och rättigheter inom hållbar utveckling i Sverige Håkansson, Louise Lundberg, Amanda 2022 application/pdf http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-57217 eng eng Jönköping University, Högskolan för lärande och kommunikation http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-57217 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess sustainability sustainable development green transition green colonialism decolonial theories colonial governmentality Sami Sami people Sápmi Sami rights Indigenous peoples Indigenous rights hållbarhet hållbar utveckling grön omställning grön kolonialism dekoloniala teorier colonial governmentality samer samiska rättigheter urfolk urfolksrättigheter Globalisation Studies Globaliseringsstudier Student thesis info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis text 2022 ftjoenkoepinguni 2022-06-22T22:31:11Z The Sami in Sweden have lived on and managed their lands since time immemorial. The strong connection to the environment and nature has given them centuries of knowledge that is still applicable to this day. With the help of their ancestral knowledge the Sami have preserved their Indigenous land. With constant work towards sustainability and extractive projects of natural resources for renewable energy that takes place in Sápmi, the question is raised of who is included in the transition towards sustainable development and who the transition is for. The purpose of this study is to investigate and get a deeper understanding of Sami perspectives on sustainability and the connection to their rights. Applied methodology for this qualitative study is semi-structured interviews with nine Sami, followed by a thematic analysis of the collected empirical data. This was done to understand and analyse perceptions of sustainable development and how it relates to Sami inclusion and Sami rights, using frameworks of colonial governmentality and green colonialism. The findings suggest that a differentiation can be made concerning how the Sami perceive actions for sustainable development and the concept of sustainable development. Further, the Sami view their inclusion in policy-making and implementation in regards to questions of sustainable development in Sweden as being somewhat low or not applied at all. In relation to environmental sustainability this study shows that the implementation of Sami rights varies depending on the context, but that it is generally experienced as insufficient, and that rights are often applied to the economic units of the samebys, and not all Sami, creating a division within the Sami community. The results also show a perception of lack of political will and a neglectance to include and implement Sami rights, as state interests are prioritised. The societal and institutional conditions for the Sami to claim their rights and require inclusion within sustainable development prove that the theories ... Bachelor Thesis sami Jönköping Univ.: Publications (DiVA)
institution Open Polar
collection Jönköping Univ.: Publications (DiVA)
op_collection_id ftjoenkoepinguni
language English
topic sustainability
sustainable development
green transition
green colonialism
decolonial theories
colonial governmentality
Sami
Sami people
Sápmi
Sami rights
Indigenous peoples
Indigenous rights
hållbarhet
hållbar utveckling
grön omställning
grön kolonialism
dekoloniala teorier
colonial
governmentality
samer
samiska rättigheter
urfolk
urfolksrättigheter
Globalisation Studies
Globaliseringsstudier
spellingShingle sustainability
sustainable development
green transition
green colonialism
decolonial theories
colonial governmentality
Sami
Sami people
Sápmi
Sami rights
Indigenous peoples
Indigenous rights
hållbarhet
hållbar utveckling
grön omställning
grön kolonialism
dekoloniala teorier
colonial
governmentality
samer
samiska rättigheter
urfolk
urfolksrättigheter
Globalisation Studies
Globaliseringsstudier
Håkansson, Louise
Lundberg, Amanda
Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden
topic_facet sustainability
sustainable development
green transition
green colonialism
decolonial theories
colonial governmentality
Sami
Sami people
Sápmi
Sami rights
Indigenous peoples
Indigenous rights
hållbarhet
hållbar utveckling
grön omställning
grön kolonialism
dekoloniala teorier
colonial
governmentality
samer
samiska rättigheter
urfolk
urfolksrättigheter
Globalisation Studies
Globaliseringsstudier
description The Sami in Sweden have lived on and managed their lands since time immemorial. The strong connection to the environment and nature has given them centuries of knowledge that is still applicable to this day. With the help of their ancestral knowledge the Sami have preserved their Indigenous land. With constant work towards sustainability and extractive projects of natural resources for renewable energy that takes place in Sápmi, the question is raised of who is included in the transition towards sustainable development and who the transition is for. The purpose of this study is to investigate and get a deeper understanding of Sami perspectives on sustainability and the connection to their rights. Applied methodology for this qualitative study is semi-structured interviews with nine Sami, followed by a thematic analysis of the collected empirical data. This was done to understand and analyse perceptions of sustainable development and how it relates to Sami inclusion and Sami rights, using frameworks of colonial governmentality and green colonialism. The findings suggest that a differentiation can be made concerning how the Sami perceive actions for sustainable development and the concept of sustainable development. Further, the Sami view their inclusion in policy-making and implementation in regards to questions of sustainable development in Sweden as being somewhat low or not applied at all. In relation to environmental sustainability this study shows that the implementation of Sami rights varies depending on the context, but that it is generally experienced as insufficient, and that rights are often applied to the economic units of the samebys, and not all Sami, creating a division within the Sami community. The results also show a perception of lack of political will and a neglectance to include and implement Sami rights, as state interests are prioritised. The societal and institutional conditions for the Sami to claim their rights and require inclusion within sustainable development prove that the theories ...
format Bachelor Thesis
author Håkansson, Louise
Lundberg, Amanda
author_facet Håkansson, Louise
Lundberg, Amanda
author_sort Håkansson, Louise
title Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden
title_short Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden
title_full Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden
title_fullStr Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability for whom? : A study on Sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in Sweden
title_sort sustainability for whom? : a study on sami perspectives on inclusion and rights within sustainable development in sweden
publisher Jönköping University, Högskolan för lärande och kommunikation
publishDate 2022
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-57217
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-57217
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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