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Sápmi, Sweden's Smörgåsbord? On Human Rights, Rights of Nature and Extractivism

Terjung, Stella LU (2022) MRSM15 20221
Human Rights Studies
Abstract
In North Sweden, Sámi activists are resisting the proposed Gállok mine, disapproving of their land being treated as a 'smörgåsbord' and countering the assumption of modernity that dichotomises the human and the nonhuman. Against this backdrop, this thesis looks at some of the unprecedented challenges the rapid extension of globalisation poses to the human and nonhuman world. In response to these challenges, the Swedish Sámi Parliament endorsed the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth (UDRME) in 2018. This study asks; what are the implications of the Sá mi Parliament adopting a Rights of Nature (RoN) declaration politically and ontologically? Is there a Sá mi-specific ontology underlying the adoption of the UDRME? To what... (More)
In North Sweden, Sámi activists are resisting the proposed Gállok mine, disapproving of their land being treated as a 'smörgåsbord' and countering the assumption of modernity that dichotomises the human and the nonhuman. Against this backdrop, this thesis looks at some of the unprecedented challenges the rapid extension of globalisation poses to the human and nonhuman world. In response to these challenges, the Swedish Sámi Parliament endorsed the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth (UDRME) in 2018. This study asks; what are the implications of the Sá mi Parliament adopting a Rights of Nature (RoN) declaration politically and ontologically? Is there a Sá mi-specific ontology underlying the adoption of the UDRME? To what extent can RoN and human rights mitigate the effects of extractivism in Sápmi? In order to find answers to these questions, the first part of this study consults a political ontology frame of reference and decolonial theory. In the second part, these contemplations are complemented with the content analysis of social media interactions from local activists, interviews and ethnographic observations from a field trip to Jokkmokk. With this approach, this thesis seeks to methodologise human rights by examining their role in the conflict of the Gállok mine together with Rights of Nature. This thesis contends that both human rights and RoN have a limited capacity to cure the ills of extractivist practices as long as they remain complicit with colonialism. However, it also suggests constructive measures of reflexive criticism and the importance of dialogue between Western-trained and indigenous scholars. (Less)
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author
Terjung, Stella LU
supervisor
organization
course
MRSM15 20221
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Rights of Nature – Extractivism – Human Rights – Decolonisation – Ontologies – Self-determination
language
English
id
9110569
date added to LUP
2023-02-13 07:51:01
date last changed
2023-02-13 07:51:01
@misc{9110569,
  abstract     = {{In North Sweden, Sámi activists are resisting the proposed Gállok mine, disapproving of their land being treated as a 'smörgåsbord' and countering the assumption of modernity that dichotomises the human and the nonhuman. Against this backdrop, this thesis looks at some of the unprecedented challenges the rapid extension of globalisation poses to the human and nonhuman world. In response to these challenges, the Swedish Sámi Parliament endorsed the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth (UDRME) in 2018. This study asks; what are the implications of the Sá mi Parliament adopting a Rights of Nature (RoN) declaration politically and ontologically? Is there a Sá mi-specific ontology underlying the adoption of the UDRME? To what extent can RoN and human rights mitigate the effects of extractivism in Sápmi? In order to find answers to these questions, the first part of this study consults a political ontology frame of reference and decolonial theory. In the second part, these contemplations are complemented with the content analysis of social media interactions from local activists, interviews and ethnographic observations from a field trip to Jokkmokk. With this approach, this thesis seeks to methodologise human rights by examining their role in the conflict of the Gállok mine together with Rights of Nature. This thesis contends that both human rights and RoN have a limited capacity to cure the ills of extractivist practices as long as they remain complicit with colonialism. However, it also suggests constructive measures of reflexive criticism and the importance of dialogue between Western-trained and indigenous scholars.}},
  author       = {{Terjung, Stella}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Sápmi, Sweden's Smörgåsbord? On Human Rights, Rights of Nature and Extractivism}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}