Reindeer husbandry has been practiced in the artic regions for centuries and is one of few ways of utilizing natural resources in regions where plant productivity is marginal and weather conditions harsh. It is a trade which in Norway often is associated to the northern parts of Scandinavia and the indigenous Sami people, and few people are aware that Innlandet County holds the second largest semi-domestic reindeer population in Norway, and that they are owned and managed by four “non-indigenous” private reindeer companies. These four companies manage collectively nearly 20 000 reindeer during the summer season and produce 200 tons of reindeer meat each year. The main discussions and focus in the literature and research on reindeer husban...
Today, climate change and competing land use practices are threatening rangelands around the world a...
This open access book focuses on climate change, Indigenous reindeer husbandry, and the underlying c...
Animal husbandry in the Fennoscandian North is limited mainly to reindeer herding and cattle farming...
Reindeer husbandry has been practiced in the artic regions for centuries and is one of few ways of u...
This volume offers a holistic understanding of the environmental and societal challenges that affect...
The author is a reindeer owner and gives his impression about the situation of reindeer husbandry in...
Using a participatory research approach, we assess the knowledge systems and political ontology of r...
Reindeer pastoralists have, for centuries, followed free-roaming animals throughout the Eurasian Arc...
Reindeer husbandry in Sweden is suffering from great challenges, where fragmentation of the landscap...
Ever since the ice sheet retreated about 10,000 years ago wild reindeer have been an important resou...
Reindeer herding in Norway is an indigenous pastoral livelihood exclusive to the Sámi people. The r...
The principal challenge for Norwegian reindeer husbandry in Finnmark today - seen from the viewpoint...
Emerging out of small-scale reindeer farming, large-scale reindeer husbandry in Sweden and Norway wa...
In the Forest Sámi community (Skogssameby) of Gällivare in northeastern Sweden, reindeer husbandry i...
Reindeer pastoralists have, for centuries, followed free-roaming animals throughout the Eurasian Arc...
Today, climate change and competing land use practices are threatening rangelands around the world a...
This open access book focuses on climate change, Indigenous reindeer husbandry, and the underlying c...
Animal husbandry in the Fennoscandian North is limited mainly to reindeer herding and cattle farming...
Reindeer husbandry has been practiced in the artic regions for centuries and is one of few ways of u...
This volume offers a holistic understanding of the environmental and societal challenges that affect...
The author is a reindeer owner and gives his impression about the situation of reindeer husbandry in...
Using a participatory research approach, we assess the knowledge systems and political ontology of r...
Reindeer pastoralists have, for centuries, followed free-roaming animals throughout the Eurasian Arc...
Reindeer husbandry in Sweden is suffering from great challenges, where fragmentation of the landscap...
Ever since the ice sheet retreated about 10,000 years ago wild reindeer have been an important resou...
Reindeer herding in Norway is an indigenous pastoral livelihood exclusive to the Sámi people. The r...
The principal challenge for Norwegian reindeer husbandry in Finnmark today - seen from the viewpoint...
Emerging out of small-scale reindeer farming, large-scale reindeer husbandry in Sweden and Norway wa...
In the Forest Sámi community (Skogssameby) of Gällivare in northeastern Sweden, reindeer husbandry i...
Reindeer pastoralists have, for centuries, followed free-roaming animals throughout the Eurasian Arc...
Today, climate change and competing land use practices are threatening rangelands around the world a...
This open access book focuses on climate change, Indigenous reindeer husbandry, and the underlying c...
Animal husbandry in the Fennoscandian North is limited mainly to reindeer herding and cattle farming...