“We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden

As conflicts between reindeer herding communities and exploitative industries such as forestry continue in Sweden, new collaborations between these reindeer herding communities and the environmental movement arise. Such collaborations have the aim to provide their members with an advantage; a synerg...

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Autor principal: Lohaus, Annalena
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2022
Materias:
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author Lohaus, Annalena
author_browse Lohaus, Annalena
author_facet Lohaus, Annalena
author_sort Lohaus, Annalena
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description As conflicts between reindeer herding communities and exploitative industries such as forestry continue in Sweden, new collaborations between these reindeer herding communities and the environmental movement arise. Such collaborations have the aim to provide their members with an advantage; a synergy that is achieved by working together. However, studies of such collaborations also show that they often are sources of frustrations instead, due to differences in e.g., purposes and resources. Previous research on collaborations between Indigenous communities and environmental organisations in other parts of the world have shown that these collaborations often bridge the aim to achieve self-determination with the aim of nature protection. While these collaborations can be a source of strength, they also struggle with addressing e.g., power imbalances. Yet, research on these kind of collaborations in a Swedish context is limited. This thesis addresses that knowledge gap by providing insight into the dynamics of such collaborations, using the example of the collaboration between Muonio reindeer herding community in northern Sweden and Greenpeace Sweden. The analysis revealed three main themes how the collaboration is perceived: The collaboration as a stepping stone, the collaboration as a place of empowerment and the collaboration as a place of asymmetry. It is shown that agreed common aims on both the outcome and the process of the collaboration are essential to building trust and guiding the collaboration forward. Being two organisations with different purposes and fields of expertise makes collaborative advantage possible in the first place, as the partners complement each other. Paradoxically, these very differences also cause challenges that need to be overcome through continuous commitment and willingness to adapt. This study then not only adds to understanding the dynamics of the collaboration at hand, but furthermore offers insights into how members can actively create conditions to make collaborations between Sámi actors and the environmental movement in Sweden successful.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
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spelling RepoSLU178912022-06-30T01:05:04Z “We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden Lohaus, Annalena Collaboration collaborative advantage reindeer herding Indigenous people environmental movement trust common aims As conflicts between reindeer herding communities and exploitative industries such as forestry continue in Sweden, new collaborations between these reindeer herding communities and the environmental movement arise. Such collaborations have the aim to provide their members with an advantage; a synergy that is achieved by working together. However, studies of such collaborations also show that they often are sources of frustrations instead, due to differences in e.g., purposes and resources. Previous research on collaborations between Indigenous communities and environmental organisations in other parts of the world have shown that these collaborations often bridge the aim to achieve self-determination with the aim of nature protection. While these collaborations can be a source of strength, they also struggle with addressing e.g., power imbalances. Yet, research on these kind of collaborations in a Swedish context is limited. This thesis addresses that knowledge gap by providing insight into the dynamics of such collaborations, using the example of the collaboration between Muonio reindeer herding community in northern Sweden and Greenpeace Sweden. The analysis revealed three main themes how the collaboration is perceived: The collaboration as a stepping stone, the collaboration as a place of empowerment and the collaboration as a place of asymmetry. It is shown that agreed common aims on both the outcome and the process of the collaboration are essential to building trust and guiding the collaboration forward. Being two organisations with different purposes and fields of expertise makes collaborative advantage possible in the first place, as the partners complement each other. Paradoxically, these very differences also cause challenges that need to be overcome through continuous commitment and willingness to adapt. This study then not only adds to understanding the dynamics of the collaboration at hand, but furthermore offers insights into how members can actively create conditions to make collaborations between Sámi actors and the environmental movement in Sweden successful. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2022 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/17891/
spellingShingle Collaboration
collaborative advantage
reindeer herding
Indigenous people
environmental movement
trust
common aims
Lohaus, Annalena
“We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden
title “We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden
title_full “We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden
title_fullStr “We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden
title_full_unstemmed “We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden
title_short “We had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between Muonio Reindeer Herding Community and Greenpeace Sweden
title_sort “we had nothing left to lose” : mapping the collaboration between muonio reindeer herding community and greenpeace sweden
topic Collaboration
collaborative advantage
reindeer herding
Indigenous people
environmental movement
trust
common aims