This chapter examines the complexities and challenges in state governance of the maximum permitted number of reindeer in Finland, Norway and Sweden. The common findings regarding the three countries are that (1) maximum permitted numbers of reindeer set by the nation states primarily seem to promote objectives other than those of herders; (2) various contextual aspects (e.g., laws, other land users, trends in science, herding practices and historical developments) partly explain the sustainable maximum permitted numbers; (3) reductionist assessments of pasture – reindeer relations easily neglect the impacts of other land users on condition and availability of pastures, thereby making the assessments biased and stigmatizing herders for alleg...
The author is a reindeer owner and gives his impression about the situation of reindeer husbandry in...
Animal husbandry in the Fennoscandian North is limited mainly to reindeer herding and cattle farming...
Using a participatory research approach, we assess the knowledge systems and political ontology of r...
This chapter examines the complexities and challenges in state governance of the maximum permitted n...
In Sápmi and beyond, the practice of reindeer herding is under increasing pressure from competing fo...
For decades, rapid, drastic changes in reindeer rangelands, also referred to as ‘pastures’ in Finlan...
Pastoralist societies have developed customary institutions to respond to an unpredictable environme...
The chapter discusses the practice of providing reindeer with supplementary feed in winter as part o...
This volume offers a holistic understanding of the environmental and societal challenges that affect...
The 2007 Reindeer Husbandry Act acknowledged in principle the tra- ditional Sámi siida as a rights ...
This thesis contributes to the field of political ecology by presenting an empirically driven analys...
Reindeer herding in Norway is an indigenous pastoral livelihood exclusive to the Sámi people. The r...
The Sami people, an indigenous people in Scandinavia, and their cultural practice of reindeer herdin...
This chapter analyses the future of traditional Arctic livelihoods as perceived by young reindeer he...
The author is a reindeer owner and gives his impression about the situation of reindeer husbandry in...
Animal husbandry in the Fennoscandian North is limited mainly to reindeer herding and cattle farming...
Using a participatory research approach, we assess the knowledge systems and political ontology of r...
This chapter examines the complexities and challenges in state governance of the maximum permitted n...
In Sápmi and beyond, the practice of reindeer herding is under increasing pressure from competing fo...
For decades, rapid, drastic changes in reindeer rangelands, also referred to as ‘pastures’ in Finlan...
Pastoralist societies have developed customary institutions to respond to an unpredictable environme...
The chapter discusses the practice of providing reindeer with supplementary feed in winter as part o...
This volume offers a holistic understanding of the environmental and societal challenges that affect...
The 2007 Reindeer Husbandry Act acknowledged in principle the tra- ditional Sámi siida as a rights ...
This thesis contributes to the field of political ecology by presenting an empirically driven analys...
Reindeer herding in Norway is an indigenous pastoral livelihood exclusive to the Sámi people. The r...
The Sami people, an indigenous people in Scandinavia, and their cultural practice of reindeer herdin...
This chapter analyses the future of traditional Arctic livelihoods as perceived by young reindeer he...
The author is a reindeer owner and gives his impression about the situation of reindeer husbandry in...
Animal husbandry in the Fennoscandian North is limited mainly to reindeer herding and cattle farming...
Using a participatory research approach, we assess the knowledge systems and political ontology of r...