Fish were absolutely necessary for survival for many households in preindustrial societies. Because fishing waters are considered a common-pool resource, it is difficult to exclude users, and the catch is subtractable. To learn what strategies were in place to avoid fish-stock depletion and secure continuous harvests, we investigated how Indigenous Sami households in Lule lappmark, Sweden, used low-productive freshwaters between 1660 and 1780. Our aim is to show how they conducted fishing and how it was linked to rules for fishing. Our sources are contemporary 17th- and 18th-century accounts and local court rulings. Rules for fishing were developed in a self-governance context. Users and fishing areas were well defined, and users often had ...
The Sami dominated large parts of boreal Sweden well into the 18th century, and knowledge of Sami su...
The coastal Sámi of Norway have, for thousands of years and long before the Norwegian state was est...
Unsustainable fishing can be surprisingly persistent despite devastating social, economic, and ecolo...
Fish were absolutely necessary for survival for many households in preindustrial societies. Because ...
This open access book uses an interdisciplinary approach that not only focuses on social organizatio...
Although the productive fishing grounds had long attracted the Crown and the Church to northern Swed...
Hunting was one of three pillars, along with fishing and reindeer husbandry in the early modern Sami...
The Sami People is known to be the only indigenous people of Europe. Its population is of 100,000 pe...
During the course of the 14th century the Swedish Crown and the Catholic Church made robust attempts...
<div><p>Historical perspectives on fisheries and related human behaviour provide valuable informatio...
In this paper we explore the subsistence economy of the Mesolithic pioneers on the island of Gotland...
Historical perspectives on fisheries and related human behaviour provide valuable information on fis...
Fisheries regulations, implemented in the 1880s, banned the sale of Indian 'food fish' and resulted...
The Sami dominated large parts of boreal Sweden well into the 18th century, and knowledge of Sami su...
The coastal Sámi of Norway have, for thousands of years and long before the Norwegian state was est...
Unsustainable fishing can be surprisingly persistent despite devastating social, economic, and ecolo...
Fish were absolutely necessary for survival for many households in preindustrial societies. Because ...
This open access book uses an interdisciplinary approach that not only focuses on social organizatio...
Although the productive fishing grounds had long attracted the Crown and the Church to northern Swed...
Hunting was one of three pillars, along with fishing and reindeer husbandry in the early modern Sami...
The Sami People is known to be the only indigenous people of Europe. Its population is of 100,000 pe...
During the course of the 14th century the Swedish Crown and the Catholic Church made robust attempts...
<div><p>Historical perspectives on fisheries and related human behaviour provide valuable informatio...
In this paper we explore the subsistence economy of the Mesolithic pioneers on the island of Gotland...
Historical perspectives on fisheries and related human behaviour provide valuable information on fis...
Fisheries regulations, implemented in the 1880s, banned the sale of Indian 'food fish' and resulted...
The Sami dominated large parts of boreal Sweden well into the 18th century, and knowledge of Sami su...
The coastal Sámi of Norway have, for thousands of years and long before the Norwegian state was est...
Unsustainable fishing can be surprisingly persistent despite devastating social, economic, and ecolo...