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Contrasting Strategies : Social organization and interaction in the Early Bronze Age of northwestern Scandinavia

Austvoll, Knut Ivar ; Fauvelle, Mikael LU orcid and Ling, Johan (2025) In Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 79.
Abstract
The transition to the Nordic Bronze Age included new technological innovations, social institutions and sociopolitical structures pushed by extensive long-distance exchange of metals and other exotica. However, traditional views often oversimplify this as a simple two-way trade system, failing to adequately explain the complex interactions in and between the regions like Scandinavia in which the societies organised themselves based on varied strategies tied to local resource potentials. Recent research, involving methods such as isotopic analysis and genomic sequencing, has provided solid evidence of movement and interaction. Despite this progress, the evidence at hand often lacks well-founded interpretations grounded in thorough... (More)
The transition to the Nordic Bronze Age included new technological innovations, social institutions and sociopolitical structures pushed by extensive long-distance exchange of metals and other exotica. However, traditional views often oversimplify this as a simple two-way trade system, failing to adequately explain the complex interactions in and between the regions like Scandinavia in which the societies organised themselves based on varied strategies tied to local resource potentials. Recent research, involving methods such as isotopic analysis and genomic sequencing, has provided solid evidence of movement and interaction. Despite this progress, the evidence at hand often lacks well-founded interpretations grounded in thorough theoretical frameworks. This study addresses interpretive challenges by employing an innovative framework grounded in collective action theory, integrating other aspects of social complexity and supported by regional datasets to achieve a more nuanced understanding of social dynamics. This approach informs us about the complex and contrasting organizational strategies and trade networks across northwestern Scandinavia (i.e. modern-day Norway up to the borders of Troms), illustrating further how local societies contributed to broader European networks. The study aims to offer a nuanced understanding of the region’s social dynamics, highlighting the interplay between coercive and cooperative strategies within the overarching Nordic Bronze Age system. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Bronze Age, Political Economy, Social Organization, Scandinavia, Trade, Collective action, Spatial analysis, Maritime Mode of Production
in
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
volume
79
pages
18 pages
publisher
Academic Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:105007742305
ISSN
0278-4165
DOI
10.1016/j.jaa.2025.101708
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fa1b48be-f97d-4489-b0f8-49a94079ce0e
date added to LUP
2025-06-11 13:23:49
date last changed
2025-07-09 04:00:54
@article{fa1b48be-f97d-4489-b0f8-49a94079ce0e,
  abstract     = {{The transition to the Nordic Bronze Age included new technological innovations, social institutions and sociopolitical structures pushed by extensive long-distance exchange of metals and other exotica. However, traditional views often oversimplify this as a simple two-way trade system, failing to adequately explain the complex interactions in and between the regions like Scandinavia in which the societies organised themselves based on varied strategies tied to local resource potentials. Recent research, involving methods such as isotopic analysis and genomic sequencing, has provided solid evidence of movement and interaction. Despite this progress, the evidence at hand often lacks well-founded interpretations grounded in thorough theoretical frameworks. This study addresses interpretive challenges by employing an innovative framework grounded in collective action theory, integrating other aspects of social complexity and supported by regional datasets to achieve a more nuanced understanding of social dynamics. This approach informs us about the complex and contrasting organizational strategies and trade networks across northwestern Scandinavia (i.e. modern-day Norway up to the borders of Troms), illustrating further how local societies contributed to broader European networks. The study aims to offer a nuanced understanding of the region’s social dynamics, highlighting the interplay between coercive and cooperative strategies within the overarching Nordic Bronze Age system.}},
  author       = {{Austvoll, Knut Ivar and Fauvelle, Mikael and Ling, Johan}},
  issn         = {{0278-4165}},
  keywords     = {{Bronze Age; Political Economy; Social Organization; Scandinavia; Trade; Collective action; Spatial analysis; Maritime Mode of Production}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Academic Press}},
  series       = {{Journal of Anthropological Archaeology}},
  title        = {{Contrasting Strategies : Social organization and interaction in the Early Bronze Age of northwestern Scandinavia}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/221169696/Austvoll_et_al_2025_-_Contrasting_Strategies.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jaa.2025.101708}},
  volume       = {{79}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}