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Fluid subsistences: towards a better understanding of northern livelihoods

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Marianne Elisabeth Lien*
Affiliation:
Department of Social Anthropology. University of Oslo. Moltke Moes vei 31. Postboks 1091 Blindern. 0851 Oslo, Norway. (m.e.lien@sai.uio.no)

Extract

In this collection we learn about varied livelihoods that are roughly grouped as northern small-scale fisheries. Two messages are particularly salient, and hence they connect nearly all the papers:

First, that small-scale fishing is paramount for social and cultural livelihoods, and an indispensable resource for reproduction of coastal communities. And second, that certain fish related practices are changing, or currently under threat, and thus threatening the core subsistence of coastal communities.

Type
Northern fisheries
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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References

Hastrup, K. 2013. Scales of attention in fieldwork: global connections and local concerns in the Arctic. Ethnography 14 (2): 145164.Google Scholar
Lien, M.E. 2012. Conclusion: salmon trajectories along the North Pacific Rim. Diversity, exchange and human-animal relations. In: Colombi, B.J. and Brooks, J.F. (editors). Keystone nations. Santa Fe: SAR Press: 237255.Google Scholar
Rybråten, S. 2013. ‘This is not a wilderness. This is where we live’. Enacting nature in Unjárga-Nesseby, northern Norway. Unpublished PhD dissertation. Oslo: University of Oslo, Department of Social Anthropology.Google Scholar