The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System

The Sámi people in Scandinavia have experienced a long history of discrimination, oppression, neglect, ridicule, and theft. Some scholars compare the history of the Sámi with that of the American Indian population. Today the Sámi who live in Sweden, Norway and Finland, together with the Sámi in Russ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: O'Dowd, Mina
Other Authors: Jacob, W. James, Cheng, Sheng Yao, Porter, Maureen K.
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Springer 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8052228
_version_ 1828674645394456576
author O'Dowd, Mina
author2 Jacob, W. James
Cheng, Sheng Yao
Porter, Maureen K.
author_facet O'Dowd, Mina
author_sort O'Dowd, Mina
collection Lund University Publications (LUP)
description The Sámi people in Scandinavia have experienced a long history of discrimination, oppression, neglect, ridicule, and theft. Some scholars compare the history of the Sámi with that of the American Indian population. Today the Sámi who live in Sweden, Norway and Finland, together with the Sámi in Russia have managed to improve their situation through concerted efforts, collaboration with one another, and cooperation with the international movement for the rights of indigenous peoples. More recently, the Sami have received support from both the European Union and the United Nations. Despite international support, the right of the Sámi people for self-determination has not been acknowledged by the Swedish, Norwegian or Finnish governments. The Sami’s right to instruction and education in their own mother tongue has not been adequately addressed. Rather government policies in the Scandinavian countries can at best be described as policies for language maintenance, while what is sorely needed are policies that re-vitalize language use among all Sámi and provide support for endangered or nearly-extinct Sámi languages. Much remains to be done for this indigenous people, not the least of which is acknowledgement of right to their land, their hunting and fishing rights and their right to determine if and how their land is to be exploited.
format Book Part
genre sami
Sámi
Sámi
genre_facet sami
Sámi
Sámi
geographic Indian
Norway
geographic_facet Indian
Norway
id ftulundlup:oai:lup.lub.lu.se:c24f06b9-2d6c-42ca-822c-d5c739a07b9f
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftulundlup
op_relation https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8052228
scopus:84943153599
publishDate 2015
publisher Springer
record_format openpolar
spelling ftulundlup:oai:lup.lub.lu.se:c24f06b9-2d6c-42ca-822c-d5c739a07b9f 2025-04-06T15:04:37+00:00 The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System O'Dowd, Mina Jacob, W. James Cheng, Sheng Yao Porter, Maureen K. 2015 https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8052228 eng eng Springer https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8052228 scopus:84943153599 Educational Sciences self-determination Sámi. Sámpi Scandinavia language revitalization contributiontobookanthology/chapter info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart text 2015 ftulundlup 2025-03-11T14:07:51Z The Sámi people in Scandinavia have experienced a long history of discrimination, oppression, neglect, ridicule, and theft. Some scholars compare the history of the Sámi with that of the American Indian population. Today the Sámi who live in Sweden, Norway and Finland, together with the Sámi in Russia have managed to improve their situation through concerted efforts, collaboration with one another, and cooperation with the international movement for the rights of indigenous peoples. More recently, the Sami have received support from both the European Union and the United Nations. Despite international support, the right of the Sámi people for self-determination has not been acknowledged by the Swedish, Norwegian or Finnish governments. The Sami’s right to instruction and education in their own mother tongue has not been adequately addressed. Rather government policies in the Scandinavian countries can at best be described as policies for language maintenance, while what is sorely needed are policies that re-vitalize language use among all Sámi and provide support for endangered or nearly-extinct Sámi languages. Much remains to be done for this indigenous people, not the least of which is acknowledgement of right to their land, their hunting and fishing rights and their right to determine if and how their land is to be exploited. Book Part sami Sámi Sámi Lund University Publications (LUP) Indian Norway
spellingShingle Educational Sciences
self-determination
Sámi. Sámpi
Scandinavia
language revitalization
O'Dowd, Mina
The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System
title The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System
title_full The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System
title_fullStr The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System
title_full_unstemmed The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System
title_short The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System
title_sort sami people in scandinavia: government policies for indigenous language recognition and support in the formal education system
topic Educational Sciences
self-determination
Sámi. Sámpi
Scandinavia
language revitalization
topic_facet Educational Sciences
self-determination
Sámi. Sámpi
Scandinavia
language revitalization
url https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8052228