Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?

Background: Previous research has shown that the health transition and demographical pattern of indigenous people has followed a different path compared to non-indigenous groups living in the same area with higher mortality rates and shortened life expectancy at birth. Objective: This paper draws at...

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Main Author: Lena Karlsson
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/16/28-16.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:dem:demres:v:28:y:2013:i:16 2024-04-14T08:11:53+00:00 Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life? Lena Karlsson https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/16/28-16.pdf unknown https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/16/28-16.pdf article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:28:18Z Background: Previous research has shown that the health transition and demographical pattern of indigenous people has followed a different path compared to non-indigenous groups living in the same area with higher mortality rates and shortened life expectancy at birth. Objective: This paper draws attention to the development of life expectancy for the Sami and non-Sami during the colonization era (1850-1899). The paper will compare the development of life expectancy levels, infant mortality, and age-specific mortality between the Sami and the non-Sami population and analyze the main causes of death. Methods: The source material for this study is a set of data files from the Demographic Data Base (DDB) at Umeå University. Life tables and calculations of values of life expectancies are calculated using period data. Results: The analysis reveals that the life expectancy at birth was remarkably lower for the Sami during the entire period, corresponding to a high infant mortality. When comparing life expectancy at birth with life expectancy at age one, Sami still had a lower life expectancy during the entire period. The analysis also reveals a lower proportion of deaths due to infections among the younger Sami. Conclusions: The results paint a complex picture of the demographic transition in Sápmi. Neither the Sami nor the non-Sami population followed the same pattern of increased life expectancies at birth, as the Swedish population did in general. The negative consequences of colonization (high mortality, low life expectancy at birth) hit the Sami and non-Sami populations, but at different time periods. Comments: The study includes the two northern parishes of Gällivare and Jukkasjärvi. life expectancy, infant mortality, Sami, colonization Article in Journal/Newspaper Gällivare Jukkasjärvi sami RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Gällivare ENVELOPE(20.660,20.660,67.132,67.132) Jukkasjärvi ENVELOPE(20.667,20.667,67.833,67.833)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Background: Previous research has shown that the health transition and demographical pattern of indigenous people has followed a different path compared to non-indigenous groups living in the same area with higher mortality rates and shortened life expectancy at birth. Objective: This paper draws attention to the development of life expectancy for the Sami and non-Sami during the colonization era (1850-1899). The paper will compare the development of life expectancy levels, infant mortality, and age-specific mortality between the Sami and the non-Sami population and analyze the main causes of death. Methods: The source material for this study is a set of data files from the Demographic Data Base (DDB) at Umeå University. Life tables and calculations of values of life expectancies are calculated using period data. Results: The analysis reveals that the life expectancy at birth was remarkably lower for the Sami during the entire period, corresponding to a high infant mortality. When comparing life expectancy at birth with life expectancy at age one, Sami still had a lower life expectancy during the entire period. The analysis also reveals a lower proportion of deaths due to infections among the younger Sami. Conclusions: The results paint a complex picture of the demographic transition in Sápmi. Neither the Sami nor the non-Sami population followed the same pattern of increased life expectancies at birth, as the Swedish population did in general. The negative consequences of colonization (high mortality, low life expectancy at birth) hit the Sami and non-Sami populations, but at different time periods. Comments: The study includes the two northern parishes of Gällivare and Jukkasjärvi. life expectancy, infant mortality, Sami, colonization
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lena Karlsson
spellingShingle Lena Karlsson
Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?
author_facet Lena Karlsson
author_sort Lena Karlsson
title Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?
title_short Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?
title_full Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?
title_fullStr Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous life expectancy in Sweden 1850-1899: Towards a long and healthy life?
title_sort indigenous life expectancy in sweden 1850-1899: towards a long and healthy life?
url https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/16/28-16.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(20.660,20.660,67.132,67.132)
ENVELOPE(20.667,20.667,67.833,67.833)
geographic Gällivare
Jukkasjärvi
geographic_facet Gällivare
Jukkasjärvi
genre Gällivare
Jukkasjärvi
sami
genre_facet Gällivare
Jukkasjärvi
sami
op_relation https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/16/28-16.pdf
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