Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river

This article explores local oral histories and selected communal written texts and their role in the severely damaged watershed of Jukajoki [and adjacent lake Jukajärvi watershed] located in Kontiolahti and Joensuu municipalities, North Karelia, Finland. All in all 35 narratives were collected 2010−...

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Published in:Fennia – International Journal of Geography
Main Author: Tero Mustonen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.11143/7637
https://doaj.org/article/e95c34fd47e4473db8245749280342d6
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:e95c34fd47e4473db8245749280342d6 2023-05-15T17:00:10+02:00 Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river Tero Mustonen 2013-08-01 https://doi.org/10.11143/7637 https://doaj.org/article/e95c34fd47e4473db8245749280342d6 en eng Geographical Society of Finland doi:10.11143/7637 1798-5617 https://doaj.org/article/e95c34fd47e4473db8245749280342d6 undefined Fennia: International Journal of Geography, Vol 191, Iss 2, Pp 76-91 (2013) Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2013 fttriple https://doi.org/10.11143/7637 2023-01-22T18:58:20Z This article explores local oral histories and selected communal written texts and their role in the severely damaged watershed of Jukajoki [and adjacent lake Jukajärvi watershed] located in Kontiolahti and Joensuu municipalities, North Karelia, Finland. All in all 35 narratives were collected 2010−2012. Four narratives have been presented in this paper as an example of the materials. Empirical materials have been analysed by using a framework of both Integrated Ecosystem Management and co-management. Three readings of the river Jukajoki and the adjacent watershed emerged from the materials – Sámi times, Savo-Karelian times and times of damages, or the industrial age of the river. Local knowledge, including optic histories, provided information about pre-industrial fisheries, fish ecology and behaviour and bird habitats. Lastly, special oral histories of keepers of the local tradition provided narratives which are consistent with inquiries from other parts of Finland, non-Euclidian readings of time and space and hint at what the Indigenous scholars have proposed as an intimate interconnection between nature and human societies extending beyond notions of social-ecological systems. Empirical oral histories also conceptualize collaborative governance with a formal role of local ecological knowledge as a future management option for the Jukajoki watershed. Watershed restoration and associated baseline information benefits greatly from the oral histories recorded with people who still remember pre-industrial and pre-war ecosystems and their qualities. Article in Journal/Newspaper karelia* karelian Sámi Unknown Fennia – International Journal of Geography 76 91
institution Open Polar
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language English
description This article explores local oral histories and selected communal written texts and their role in the severely damaged watershed of Jukajoki [and adjacent lake Jukajärvi watershed] located in Kontiolahti and Joensuu municipalities, North Karelia, Finland. All in all 35 narratives were collected 2010−2012. Four narratives have been presented in this paper as an example of the materials. Empirical materials have been analysed by using a framework of both Integrated Ecosystem Management and co-management. Three readings of the river Jukajoki and the adjacent watershed emerged from the materials – Sámi times, Savo-Karelian times and times of damages, or the industrial age of the river. Local knowledge, including optic histories, provided information about pre-industrial fisheries, fish ecology and behaviour and bird habitats. Lastly, special oral histories of keepers of the local tradition provided narratives which are consistent with inquiries from other parts of Finland, non-Euclidian readings of time and space and hint at what the Indigenous scholars have proposed as an intimate interconnection between nature and human societies extending beyond notions of social-ecological systems. Empirical oral histories also conceptualize collaborative governance with a formal role of local ecological knowledge as a future management option for the Jukajoki watershed. Watershed restoration and associated baseline information benefits greatly from the oral histories recorded with people who still remember pre-industrial and pre-war ecosystems and their qualities.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Tero Mustonen
spellingShingle Tero Mustonen
Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river
author_facet Tero Mustonen
author_sort Tero Mustonen
title Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river
title_short Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river
title_full Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river
title_fullStr Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river
title_full_unstemmed Oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in Jukajoki river
title_sort oral histories as a baseline of landscape restoration – co-management and watershed knowledge in jukajoki river
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
publishDate 2013
url https://doi.org/10.11143/7637
https://doaj.org/article/e95c34fd47e4473db8245749280342d6
genre karelia*
karelian
Sámi
genre_facet karelia*
karelian
Sámi
op_source Fennia: International Journal of Geography, Vol 191, Iss 2, Pp 76-91 (2013)
op_relation doi:10.11143/7637
1798-5617
https://doaj.org/article/e95c34fd47e4473db8245749280342d6
op_rights undefined
op_doi https://doi.org/10.11143/7637
container_title Fennia – International Journal of Geography
container_start_page 76
op_container_end_page 91
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