Which knowledge counts?

Sweden has ambitious climate and energy policies, for example 100 percent fossil free electricity production by 2040. A central part of the policies are wind power developments. However, wind power is not unproblematic either in an environmental or a social perspective as it negatively affects the i...

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Main Author: Hansson, Emma
Format: Text
Language:Swedish
English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/1/hansson_e_180709.pdf
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spelling ftsluppsalast:oai:stud.epsilon.slu.se:13596 2023-05-15T17:44:49+02:00 Which knowledge counts? Hansson, Emma 2018-07-09 application/pdf https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/1/hansson_e_180709.pdf sv eng swe eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/ urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-9646 https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/1/hansson_e_180709.pdf Nature conservation and land resources Energy resources management Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed 2018 ftsluppsalast 2022-09-10T18:12:02Z Sweden has ambitious climate and energy policies, for example 100 percent fossil free electricity production by 2040. A central part of the policies are wind power developments. However, wind power is not unproblematic either in an environmental or a social perspective as it negatively affects the indigenous practice of reindeer herding in Northern Sweden. With a focus on traditional knowledge, I have studied power and knowledge relations in a conflict between a wind power company and indigenous Sami reindeer herding communities in Gabrielsberget, Nordmaling’s municipality. I have utilised the theoretical, as well as methodological, framework of critical discourse analysis, drawing on the work of Fairclough. Furthermore, Foucault’s work on power and knowledge is used to analyze the dominant discourses regarding knowledge claims and its implications for the environmental permit process. The analysis of legal documents and recordings of court hearings shows that traditional knowledge is seen as a secondary source of knowledge and that reindeer herding is commonly constructed as a business, hiding its cultural values and connection to traditional knowledge. To be viewed as legitimate actor and have their claims and stakes taken into account, the Sami communities had to align with discourses constructing reindeer herding as a business and build their arguments on science instead of traditional knowledge. As discourses are socially constitutive, this will have implications both for how environmental permit processes plays out in the future but also for the status of traditional knowledge and reindeer herding. Text Northern Sweden sami sami 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 Nature conservation and land resources
Energy resources management
spellingShingle Nature conservation and land resources
Energy resources management
Hansson, Emma
Which knowledge counts?
topic_facet Nature conservation and land resources
Energy resources management
description Sweden has ambitious climate and energy policies, for example 100 percent fossil free electricity production by 2040. A central part of the policies are wind power developments. However, wind power is not unproblematic either in an environmental or a social perspective as it negatively affects the indigenous practice of reindeer herding in Northern Sweden. With a focus on traditional knowledge, I have studied power and knowledge relations in a conflict between a wind power company and indigenous Sami reindeer herding communities in Gabrielsberget, Nordmaling’s municipality. I have utilised the theoretical, as well as methodological, framework of critical discourse analysis, drawing on the work of Fairclough. Furthermore, Foucault’s work on power and knowledge is used to analyze the dominant discourses regarding knowledge claims and its implications for the environmental permit process. The analysis of legal documents and recordings of court hearings shows that traditional knowledge is seen as a secondary source of knowledge and that reindeer herding is commonly constructed as a business, hiding its cultural values and connection to traditional knowledge. To be viewed as legitimate actor and have their claims and stakes taken into account, the Sami communities had to align with discourses constructing reindeer herding as a business and build their arguments on science instead of traditional knowledge. As discourses are socially constitutive, this will have implications both for how environmental permit processes plays out in the future but also for the status of traditional knowledge and reindeer herding.
format Text
author Hansson, Emma
author_facet Hansson, Emma
author_sort Hansson, Emma
title Which knowledge counts?
title_short Which knowledge counts?
title_full Which knowledge counts?
title_fullStr Which knowledge counts?
title_full_unstemmed Which knowledge counts?
title_sort which knowledge counts?
publishDate 2018
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/1/hansson_e_180709.pdf
genre Northern Sweden
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genre_facet Northern Sweden
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op_relation https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/
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https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13596/1/hansson_e_180709.pdf
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