Article published In:
Journal of Language and Politics
Vol. 21:6 (2022) ► pp.827846
References
Alfred, Taiaiake, & Corntassel, Jeff
2005 “Being Indigenous: Resurgences Against Contemporary Colonialism”. Government and Opposition 40 (4): 597–614. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Althusser, Louis
(1970) 2014On the Reproduction of Capitalism: Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses. London: Verso Books.Google Scholar
Altmann, Philipp
2020 “Ecologists by Default? How the Indigenous Movement in Ecuador Became Protector of Nature”. Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research 33 (2): 160–72.Google Scholar
Bicker, Alan, Roy Eller, and Peter Parkes
eds. 2003Indigenous Environmental Knowledge and Its Transformations : Critical Anthropological Perspectives. London: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Brown, Chris, Phil Cerny, Joseph Grieco, A. J. R. Groom, Steve Smith, Richard Higgott, G. John Ikenberry, Caroline Kennedy-Pipe, and Steve Lamy
1996State Sovereignty as Social Construct. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Callon, Michel
1986 “Elements of a Sociology of Translation: Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of St Brieuc Bay”. In Power, Action and Belief: A New Sociology of Knowledge?, edited by John Law, 196–233. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Carpentier, Nico
2017The discursive-material knot: Cyprus in conflict and community media participation. Peter Lang. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Castree, Noel
2004 “Differential Geographies: Place, Indigenous Rights and “Local” Resources”. Political Geography 23 (2): 133–67. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Coulthard, Glen
2014Red Skin, White Masks: Rejecting the Colonial Politics of Recognition. University of Minnesota Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Darier, Éric
1996 “Environmental Governmentality: The Case of Canada’s Green Plan”. Environmental Politics 5 (4): 585–606. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Death, Carl
2011 “Summit Theatre: Exemplary Governmentality and Environmental Diplomacy in Johannesburg and Copenhagen”. Environmental Politics 20 (1): 1–19. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Dove, Michael R.
2006 “Indigenous People and Environmental Politics”. Annual Review of Anthropology 351: 191–208. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Dromi, S. M., & Shani, L.
(2020) “Love of Land: Nature Protection, Nationalism, and the Struggle over the Establishment of New Communities in Israel”. Rural Sociology 85 (1): 111–36. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Duile, Timo
2017 “Naturalizing the Native Subject: Indigenous Activism, Discourse, and the Meaning of Nature in West Kalimantan, Indonesia”. Zeitschrift Für Ethnologie 142 (1): 1–22.Google Scholar
Duvall, Chris S.
2020 “Context Matters: The Holism and Subjectivity of Environmental Knowledge”. In The Routledge Handbook of Indigenous Environmental Knowledge, 35–45. London: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Filimonov, Kirill, and Nico Carpentier
2021 “Beyond the State as the ‘Cold Monster’: The Importance of Russian Alternative Media in Reconfiguring the Hegemonic State Discourse”. Critical Discourse Studies. Advance online publication. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Foucault, Michel
(1978) 2002 “Governmentality”. In Power: Essential Works of Foucault 1954–1984, edited by James D. Faubion, 201–22. London: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
(1977) 2002 ‘Truth and Power’. In Power: Essential Works of Foucault 1954–1984, edited by James D. Faubion, 111–33. London: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Frank, D. J., A. Hironaka, and E. Schofer
2000 “The Nation-State and the Natural Environment over the Twentieth Century”. American Sociological Review 65 (1): 96–116. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gilberthorpe, Emma, and Gavin Hilson
2016Natural Resource Extraction and Indigenous Livelihoods: Development Challenges in an Era of Globalization. London: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ginn, F.
2008 “Extension, Subversion, Containment: Eco-Nationalism and (Post)Colonial Nature in Aotearoa New Zealand”. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 33 (3): 335–53. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Goldman, Michael
2001 “Constructing an Environmental State: Eco-Governmentality and Other Transnational Practices of a ‘Green’ World Bank”. Social Problems, 48 (4): 499–523. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Grove, R.
1995Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism 1600–1860. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Huggan, G., and H. Tiffin
2009Postcolonial Ecocriticism: Literature, Animals, Environment. Postcolonial Ecocriticism: Literature, Animals, Environment. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Johnston, Ron J.
1996Nature, state and economy: a political economy of the environment. London: John Wiley.Google Scholar
Kortekangas, Otso
2017 “Useful Citizens, Useful Citizenship: Cultural Contexts of Sámi Education in Early Twentieth-Century Norway, Sweden, and Finland”. Paedagogica Historica 53 (1/2): 80–92. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lalander, Rickard
2014 “Rights of Nature and the Indigenous Peoples in Bolivia and Ecuador: A Straitjacket for Progressive Development Politics?Revista Iberoamericana de Estudios de Desarrollo = Iberoamerican Journal of Development Studies 3 (2): 148–73. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lantto, Patrik
2010 “Borders, Citizenship and Change: The Case of the Sami People, 1751– 2008”. Citizenship Studies 14 (5): 543–56. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lehtola, Veli-Pekka
2015 “Sámi Histories, Colonialism, and Finland”. Arctic Anthropology 52 (2): 22–36. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lindmark, Daniel
2013 “Colonial Encounter in Early Modern Sápmi”. In Scandinavian Colonialism and the Rise of Modernity, 131–46. New York: Springer. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Luke, Timothy W.
1999 “Environmentality as Green Governmentality”. In Discourses of the Environment, edited by Éric Darier, 121–51. Oxford: Blackwell Oxford.Google Scholar
Niezen, Ronald
2000 “Recognizing Indigenism: Canadian Unity and the International Movement of Indigenous Peoples”. Comparative Studies in Society and History 42 (1): 119–48. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nordin, Jonas M.
2015 “Metals of Metabolism: The Construction of Industrial Space and the Commodification of Early Modern Sápmi”. In Historical Archaeologies of Capitalism, 249–72. New York: Springer. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nygren, Anja
1999 “Local Knowledge in the Environment–Development Discourse: From Dichotomies to Situated Knowledges”. Critique of Anthropology 19 (3): 267–88. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ojala, Carl-Gösta, and Jonas M. Nordin
2015 “Mining Sápmi: Colonial Histories, Sámi Archaeology, and the Exploitation of Natural Resources in Northern Sweden”. Arctic Anthropology 52 (2): 6–21. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Omma Simma, Sara
dir. Tvångsförflyttningar – Bággojohtin. Stockholm, Kiruna: SVT 2019.Google Scholar
Pikkarainen, Heidi, and Björn Brodin
2008Discrimination of the Sami: The Rights of the Sami from a Discrimination Perspective. Ombudsmannen mot etnisk diskriminering (DO).Google Scholar
Reichertz, Jo
2019 “Abduction: The Logic of Discovery of Grounded Theory – An Updated Review”. In The SAGE Handbook of Current Developments in Grounded Theory, edited by Antony Bryant and Kathy Charmaz, 259–81. London: SAGE.Google Scholar
Riseth, H. Tømmervik, and J. W. Bjerke
2016 “175 Years of Adaptation: North Scandinavian Sámi Reindeer Herding between Government Policies and Winter Climate Variability (1835–2010)”. Journal of Forest Economics 241: 186–204. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Robertson, Morgan M.
2004 “The Neoliberalization of Ecosystem Services: Wetland Mitigation Banking and Problems in Environmental Governance’. Geoforum, 35 (3): 361–373. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Salmón, Enrique
2000 “Kincentric Ecology: Indigenous Perceptions of the Human–Nature Relationship”. Ecological Applications 10 (5): 1327–32.Google Scholar
Samiskt informationscentrum
n.d. “The Sami: An Indigenous People”. Accessed 2 May, 2022. [URL]
Schreurs, Miranda A.
2003Environmental Politics in Japan, Germany, and the United States. Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Simons, Jonathan
1995Foucault and the Political. Thinking the Political. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Simpson, Leanne B.
2017As We Have Always Done: Indigenous Freedom Through Radical Resistance. University of Minnesota Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Smith, N.
1999 “The Howl and the Pussy: Feral Cats and Wild Dogs in the Australian Imagination”. Australian Journal of Anthropology 10 (3): 288–305. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sotoca, Adolfo
2020 “More than one city: Kiruna and the technological megasystem of Sweden’s North”. In Kiruna forever, edited by Daniel Golling & Carlos M. Carrasco, 75–81. Stockholm: Arkitektur Förlag.Google Scholar
SVT
n.d. “Tvångsförflyttningar – Bággojohtin”. Accessed 2 May, 2022. [URL]
Tanasescu, Minhea
2015 “Nature Advocacy and the Indigenous Symbol”. Environmental Values 24 (1): 105–22. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Thornton, Thomas F., and Shonil A. Bhagwat
2020The Routledge Handbook of Indigenous Environmental Knowledge. London: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Turner, Nancy J., Marianne Boelscher Ignace, and Ronald Ignace
2000 “Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Wisdom of Aboriginal Peoples in British Columbia”. Ecological Applications 10 (5): 1275–87. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Whitehead, M.
(2008) “Cold Monsters and Ecological Leviathans: Reflections on the Relationships between States and the Environment”. Geography Compass, 2 (2): 414–432. DOI logoGoogle Scholar