Wild berries became a valuable export article in Sweden and Finland at the end of the nineteenth century. At the time, property rights over wild berries were not explicitly defined, and in both countries, proposals were made to subject the berries to the landowner. The proposals did not pass and wild berry-picking on another's land continued, as seen from today's perspective, to be available to everyone. This paper looks at the socioeconomic context of wild berry-picking, and asks whether the principle of allemansrätt – a Nordic tradition of public access to nature – played a role in why wild berries did not become private property. By focusing on the Finnish penal code debate of 1888 and the process of stabilising the property rights, the ...
During the nineteenth century, competition over forestland and waterways grew in Northern Sweden. Th...
Forests in Sweden, as well as natural sites in other Northern European countries, are the center of ...
Under the influence of the Enlightenment, civil legislation was transformed throughout Western Europ...
Everyman’s right, as applied in Finland and other Nordic countries, allows the picking of natural pr...
The chapter studies the tradition of allemansrätten, a right of public access to nature, in recently...
This paper focuses on the development of property rights to village com-mons, as they appear in the ...
The paper discusses the link between commons as they might have been used in prehistoric Norway and...
This thesis deals with the subjects of conservation policies and property rights and how these two t...
Defence date: 7 November 2016Examining Board: Professor Youssef Cassis, EUI (Supervisor); Professor ...
Large quantities of cloudberries were picked on Hedmarksvidda (the Hedmark Plains) during the interw...
This study forwards a social approach to property regimes; to sets of rules created to access, use, ...
More than 200 years after the King sold one of the “King’s commons” to urban timber merchants, local...
The paper reviews the development of the legal status of Norwegian commons from the first known legi...
Attitudes towards the land rights of Sami reindeer herders have changed considerably during the last...
During the nineteenth century, competition over forestland and waterways grew in Northern Sweden. Th...
Forests in Sweden, as well as natural sites in other Northern European countries, are the center of ...
Under the influence of the Enlightenment, civil legislation was transformed throughout Western Europ...
Everyman’s right, as applied in Finland and other Nordic countries, allows the picking of natural pr...
The chapter studies the tradition of allemansrätten, a right of public access to nature, in recently...
This paper focuses on the development of property rights to village com-mons, as they appear in the ...
The paper discusses the link between commons as they might have been used in prehistoric Norway and...
This thesis deals with the subjects of conservation policies and property rights and how these two t...
Defence date: 7 November 2016Examining Board: Professor Youssef Cassis, EUI (Supervisor); Professor ...
Large quantities of cloudberries were picked on Hedmarksvidda (the Hedmark Plains) during the interw...
This study forwards a social approach to property regimes; to sets of rules created to access, use, ...
More than 200 years after the King sold one of the “King’s commons” to urban timber merchants, local...
The paper reviews the development of the legal status of Norwegian commons from the first known legi...
Attitudes towards the land rights of Sami reindeer herders have changed considerably during the last...
During the nineteenth century, competition over forestland and waterways grew in Northern Sweden. Th...
Forests in Sweden, as well as natural sites in other Northern European countries, are the center of ...
Under the influence of the Enlightenment, civil legislation was transformed throughout Western Europ...