ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE

Frank Sejersen: Arctic people as by-standers and actors at the global stage For centuries, the indigenous peoples of the Arctic have been perceived as isolated from the rest of the world. The article argues that secluded Arctic communities do not exist and that Arctic peoples are integrated into num...

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Main Author: Sejersen, Frank
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Danish
Published: Institut for Antropologi, Københavns Universitet 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438
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spelling ftsbaarhusojs:oai:ojs.tidsskrift.dk:article/115438 2023-05-15T14:32:51+02:00 ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE Sejersen, Frank 1996-02-01 application/pdf https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438 dan dan Institut for Antropologi, Københavns Universitet https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438/163748 https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438 Tidsskriftet Antropologi; Nr. 32 (1996): Indfødte Tidsskriftet Antropologi; No. 32 (1996): Indfødte 2596-5425 0906-3021 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Fagfællebedømt artikel 1996 ftsbaarhusojs 2021-05-06T20:36:42Z Frank Sejersen: Arctic people as by-standers and actors at the global stage For centuries, the indigenous peoples of the Arctic have been perceived as isolated from the rest of the world. The article argues that secluded Arctic communities do not exist and that Arctic peoples are integrated into numerous political, cultural and economic relations of a global extent. The pre-colonial inter-continental trade between Siberia and Alaska and the increased militarization the whole circumpolar region are but two examples. Throughout history, indigenous peoples of the Arctic have been players on the global stage. Today, this position has been strengthened because political work on this stage is imperative in order to secure the welfare and possibilities of local Arctic communities. To mention an example, Arctic peoples’ hunting activities have been under extreme pressure from the anti-harvesting movement. The anti-harvesting organizations run campaigns to ban hunting and stop the trade with products from whales, seals and furbearing animals. Thus, political and cultural processes far from the homeland of Arctic peoples, have consequences for the daily life of many Arctic families. The global stage has become an important comerstone in indigenous peoples’ strive to gain more control over their own future. The right to trade, development and self-determination are some of the rights they claim. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arktis* Alaska Siberia Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library
op_collection_id ftsbaarhusojs
language Danish
description Frank Sejersen: Arctic people as by-standers and actors at the global stage For centuries, the indigenous peoples of the Arctic have been perceived as isolated from the rest of the world. The article argues that secluded Arctic communities do not exist and that Arctic peoples are integrated into numerous political, cultural and economic relations of a global extent. The pre-colonial inter-continental trade between Siberia and Alaska and the increased militarization the whole circumpolar region are but two examples. Throughout history, indigenous peoples of the Arctic have been players on the global stage. Today, this position has been strengthened because political work on this stage is imperative in order to secure the welfare and possibilities of local Arctic communities. To mention an example, Arctic peoples’ hunting activities have been under extreme pressure from the anti-harvesting movement. The anti-harvesting organizations run campaigns to ban hunting and stop the trade with products from whales, seals and furbearing animals. Thus, political and cultural processes far from the homeland of Arctic peoples, have consequences for the daily life of many Arctic families. The global stage has become an important comerstone in indigenous peoples’ strive to gain more control over their own future. The right to trade, development and self-determination are some of the rights they claim.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sejersen, Frank
spellingShingle Sejersen, Frank
ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE
author_facet Sejersen, Frank
author_sort Sejersen, Frank
title ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE
title_short ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE
title_full ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE
title_fullStr ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE
title_full_unstemmed ARKTISKE FOLK SOM STATISTER OG AKTØRER PÅ DEN GLOBALE SCENE
title_sort arktiske folk som statister og aktører på den globale scene
publisher Institut for Antropologi, Københavns Universitet
publishDate 1996
url https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arktis*
Alaska
Siberia
genre_facet Arctic
Arktis*
Alaska
Siberia
op_source Tidsskriftet Antropologi; Nr. 32 (1996): Indfødte
Tidsskriftet Antropologi; No. 32 (1996): Indfødte
2596-5425
0906-3021
op_relation https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438/163748
https://tidsskrift.dk/tidsskriftetantropologi/article/view/115438
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