175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)

Unmanaged wild reindeer populations tend to follow cyclical behaviour, and domesticatedreindeer populations often show cyclical behaviour, too. In this contribution, we intendto use the long-term development of two areas in northern Scandinavia to explore howexternally imposed policies and winter cl...

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Published in:Journal of Forest Economics
Main Authors: Riseth, Jan Åge, Tømmervik, Hans, Bjerke, Jarle W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2640353
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002
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spelling ftnorce:oai:norceresearch.brage.unit.no:11250/2640353 2023-05-15T16:12:12+02:00 175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010) Riseth, Jan Åge Tømmervik, Hans Bjerke, Jarle W. 2016 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2640353 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002 eng eng Nordisk ministerråd: Nordic Centre of Excellence (NCoE) project CLINF Andre: FRAM – High North Research Centre for Climate and the Norges forskningsråd: 225006 Norges forskningsråd: 216434 Journal of Forest Economics. 2016, 24 186-204. urn:issn:1104-6899 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2640353 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002 cristin:1373485 Journal of Forest Economics 24 186-204 Peer reviewed Journal article 2016 ftnorce https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002 2022-10-13T05:50:45Z Unmanaged wild reindeer populations tend to follow cyclical behaviour, and domesticatedreindeer populations often show cyclical behaviour, too. In this contribution, we intendto use the long-term development of two areas in northern Scandinavia to explore howexternally imposed policies and winter climate variability have influenced the reindeer herdsize and pasture state. We do this by comparing the development in two areas that are rathersimilar ecologically: Torneträsk in northernmost Sweden and Kautokeino (Vest-Finnmark)in northernmost Norway.Climatic and ecological studies as well as commons theory have been useful tools forunderstanding the inherent socio-ecological dynamics. Especially the time from 1850 to1940 includes several short periods when historical sources document combinations ofevents such as (1) closure of national borders to cross-border herding migrations, (2) relo-cations of herder households, (3) overutilization of lichen pastures, (4) catastrophic winters,and (5) forced herd reductions. The high number of incidents and actions during this eramakes it challenging to disentangle causes and effects.Our main findings are based on the documented effects of international events and con-sequent government policies and actions in Fennoscandia from 1852 to 1921 which haddramatic consequences, including excessive numbers of reindeer and people in north-ernmost Sweden, leading to more or less forced relocation southwards in Sweden withcascading effects in large parts of Sápmi. We have found clear indications that this con-tributed to overutilization of lichen pastures and beyond any reasonable doubt must alsohave reinforced the effects of several of the documented catastrophic climatic events, espe-cially in areas like Torneträsk to where many families from Finnmark were relocated. Fromthe first border closure in 1852 to the Second World War it thus seems as if the shocks fromthe political events were the main factor determining the development of reindeer herdingin large parts of Sápmi. The ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Fennoscandia Finnmark Kautokeino Sámi Finnmark NORCE vitenarkiv (Norwegian Research Centre) Kautokeino ENVELOPE(23.048,23.048,69.003,69.003) Torneträsk ENVELOPE(18.861,18.861,68.392,68.392) Journal of Forest Economics 24 186 204
institution Open Polar
collection NORCE vitenarkiv (Norwegian Research Centre)
op_collection_id ftnorce
language English
description Unmanaged wild reindeer populations tend to follow cyclical behaviour, and domesticatedreindeer populations often show cyclical behaviour, too. In this contribution, we intendto use the long-term development of two areas in northern Scandinavia to explore howexternally imposed policies and winter climate variability have influenced the reindeer herdsize and pasture state. We do this by comparing the development in two areas that are rathersimilar ecologically: Torneträsk in northernmost Sweden and Kautokeino (Vest-Finnmark)in northernmost Norway.Climatic and ecological studies as well as commons theory have been useful tools forunderstanding the inherent socio-ecological dynamics. Especially the time from 1850 to1940 includes several short periods when historical sources document combinations ofevents such as (1) closure of national borders to cross-border herding migrations, (2) relo-cations of herder households, (3) overutilization of lichen pastures, (4) catastrophic winters,and (5) forced herd reductions. The high number of incidents and actions during this eramakes it challenging to disentangle causes and effects.Our main findings are based on the documented effects of international events and con-sequent government policies and actions in Fennoscandia from 1852 to 1921 which haddramatic consequences, including excessive numbers of reindeer and people in north-ernmost Sweden, leading to more or less forced relocation southwards in Sweden withcascading effects in large parts of Sápmi. We have found clear indications that this con-tributed to overutilization of lichen pastures and beyond any reasonable doubt must alsohave reinforced the effects of several of the documented catastrophic climatic events, espe-cially in areas like Torneträsk to where many families from Finnmark were relocated. Fromthe first border closure in 1852 to the Second World War it thus seems as if the shocks fromthe political events were the main factor determining the development of reindeer herdingin large parts of Sápmi. The ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Riseth, Jan Åge
Tømmervik, Hans
Bjerke, Jarle W.
spellingShingle Riseth, Jan Åge
Tømmervik, Hans
Bjerke, Jarle W.
175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
author_facet Riseth, Jan Åge
Tømmervik, Hans
Bjerke, Jarle W.
author_sort Riseth, Jan Åge
title 175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
title_short 175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
title_full 175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
title_fullStr 175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
title_full_unstemmed 175 years of adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
title_sort 175 years of adaptation: north scandinavian sámi reindeer herding between government policies and winter climate variability (1835–2010)
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2640353
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002
long_lat ENVELOPE(23.048,23.048,69.003,69.003)
ENVELOPE(18.861,18.861,68.392,68.392)
geographic Kautokeino
Torneträsk
geographic_facet Kautokeino
Torneträsk
genre Fennoscandia
Finnmark
Kautokeino
Sámi
Finnmark
genre_facet Fennoscandia
Finnmark
Kautokeino
Sámi
Finnmark
op_source Journal of Forest Economics
24
186-204
op_relation Nordisk ministerråd: Nordic Centre of Excellence (NCoE) project CLINF
Andre: FRAM – High North Research Centre for Climate and the
Norges forskningsråd: 225006
Norges forskningsråd: 216434
Journal of Forest Economics. 2016, 24 186-204.
urn:issn:1104-6899
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2640353
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002
cristin:1373485
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfe.2016.05.002
container_title Journal of Forest Economics
container_volume 24
container_start_page 186
op_container_end_page 204
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