Our Northern-Finnish wild berries

Finnish forests and swamps are bulging wild berries but only a fraction is picked each year. Finland is a remarkable source and exporter of wild berries and to meet the increasing commercial wild berry demand, foreign migrant wild berry pickers were introduced into Finland in mid-2000. The change ha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Visuri, Anne
Format: Text
Language:Swedish
English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/1/visuri_a_170629.pdf
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spelling ftsluppsalast:oai:stud.epsilon.slu.se:10335 2023-05-15T17:01:52+02:00 Our Northern-Finnish wild berries Visuri, Anne 2017-06-29 application/pdf https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/1/visuri_a_170629.pdf sv eng swe eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/ urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-6507 https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/1/visuri_a_170629.pdf Social sciences humanities and education Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed 2017 ftsluppsalast 2022-09-10T18:11:01Z Finnish forests and swamps are bulging wild berries but only a fraction is picked each year. Finland is a remarkable source and exporter of wild berries and to meet the increasing commercial wild berry demand, foreign migrant wild berry pickers were introduced into Finland in mid-2000. The change has been challenging for the Kemijärvi native wild berry pickers and the phenomenon of migrant pickers has raised numerous social and ecological concerns among natives. The aim of this thesis was to conduct an ethnographic study to understand the wild berry picking culture from Kemijärvi natives’ perspective. This thesis examines natives wild berry pickers’ lifeworld and the reasons for creating and maintaining the interest towards wild berry picking. This research also aim to understand how native wild berry pickers see the declining interest towards wild berry picking and how they experience the phenomenon of migrant wild berry pickers. The research shows that the wild berries are closely related to natives’ lifecycle and the kinship formation affects to the creation of interest towards wild berry picking culture. The wild berry picking field has an impact on natives’ perception of the world and reality creating differences in the perception of social responsibility. The migrant pickers are perceived as diligent workers but in the confrontation on the swamps and forest, their position in the wild picking society are seen less worthy and picking areas are causing conflicts. The study concludes that the long tradition, inherited culture, and the natives’ position in the field enforce and strengthen the tendency to see wild berries and picking positively. The experiences of the participants in this study provide important pointers to some of the driving forces behind their perceptions and opinions. Text Kemijärvi Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
op_collection_id ftsluppsalast
language Swedish
English
topic Social sciences
humanities and education
spellingShingle Social sciences
humanities and education
Visuri, Anne
Our Northern-Finnish wild berries
topic_facet Social sciences
humanities and education
description Finnish forests and swamps are bulging wild berries but only a fraction is picked each year. Finland is a remarkable source and exporter of wild berries and to meet the increasing commercial wild berry demand, foreign migrant wild berry pickers were introduced into Finland in mid-2000. The change has been challenging for the Kemijärvi native wild berry pickers and the phenomenon of migrant pickers has raised numerous social and ecological concerns among natives. The aim of this thesis was to conduct an ethnographic study to understand the wild berry picking culture from Kemijärvi natives’ perspective. This thesis examines natives wild berry pickers’ lifeworld and the reasons for creating and maintaining the interest towards wild berry picking. This research also aim to understand how native wild berry pickers see the declining interest towards wild berry picking and how they experience the phenomenon of migrant wild berry pickers. The research shows that the wild berries are closely related to natives’ lifecycle and the kinship formation affects to the creation of interest towards wild berry picking culture. The wild berry picking field has an impact on natives’ perception of the world and reality creating differences in the perception of social responsibility. The migrant pickers are perceived as diligent workers but in the confrontation on the swamps and forest, their position in the wild picking society are seen less worthy and picking areas are causing conflicts. The study concludes that the long tradition, inherited culture, and the natives’ position in the field enforce and strengthen the tendency to see wild berries and picking positively. The experiences of the participants in this study provide important pointers to some of the driving forces behind their perceptions and opinions.
format Text
author Visuri, Anne
author_facet Visuri, Anne
author_sort Visuri, Anne
title Our Northern-Finnish wild berries
title_short Our Northern-Finnish wild berries
title_full Our Northern-Finnish wild berries
title_fullStr Our Northern-Finnish wild berries
title_full_unstemmed Our Northern-Finnish wild berries
title_sort our northern-finnish wild berries
publishDate 2017
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/1/visuri_a_170629.pdf
genre Kemijärvi
genre_facet Kemijärvi
op_relation https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/
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https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10335/1/visuri_a_170629.pdf
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