3 resultados para SAMI
em Dalarna University College Electronic Archive
Resumo:
The aim of this essay is to study how the Sami are presented in four textbooks about religion and history that are used in the schools of the majority culture of Sweden today and one book of ideas asto how a textbook could look like from a Sami's perspective. Its aim is not only to study how the Sami are presented but also to discuss how students who read these books could interpret what it means to be a Sami and what their culture is about. It is also meant to discuss how the Sami identitycould be formed. In order to be able to discuss this the essay uses three different kinds of theories about identity and culture. The analysis showed that there is little information about Sami culture, identity, religion and historypresented in the four textbooks used in schools of the majority culture and that these books seem to want students to think that the Sami are troublemakers but are and should be assimilated into the majority culture.
Resumo:
Denna uppsats problematiserar hur kollektiva förvaltningsorganisationer fördelar pengar insamlade från offentligt framförd klubbmusik samt undersöker hur etablerade dj’s och producenter ser på dagens system och tror sig påverkas av detta. Med djupintervjuer av fyra personer undersöker uppsatsen även hur dessa ser på rapportering av den spelade musiken, vilka problem som kan uppstå och om det finns tekniska möjligheter att underlätta för korrekt fördelning. Resultaten visar att intervjupersonerna skiljer sig åt i vilken typ av karriär de har och därmed hur man förhåller sig till dagens system. Ingen ställde sig dock positiv till att rapportera in spellistor med vad de spelat som dj’s, man lyfte även fram problemet med att ersätta musik som spelas men ännu inte släppts officiellt. Det framkom också att vi idag har tekniska möjligheter att övervaka vad som spelas genom användandet av akustiska fingeravtryck. Jag diskuterade att det är först när ett sådant system är på plats som vi kan se hur mycket fel dagens pengar fördelas.
Resumo:
Reindeer herding in Sweden is a form of pastoralism practised by the indigenous Sami population. The economy is mainly based on meat production. Herd size is generally regulated by harvest in order not to overuse grazing ranges and keep a productive herd. Nonetheless, herd growth and room for harvest is currently small in many areas. Negative herd growth and low harvest rate were observed in one of two herds in a reindeer herding community in Central Sweden. The herds (A and B) used the same ranges from April until the autumn gathering in October-December, but were separated on different ranges over winter. Analyses of capture-recapture for 723 adult female reindeer over five years (2007-2012) revealed high annual losses (7.1% and 18.4%, for herd A and B respectively). A continuing decline in the total reindeer number in herd B demonstrated an inability to maintain the herd size in spite of a very small harvest. An estimated breakpoint for when herd size cannot be kept stable confirmed that the observed female mortality rate in herd B represented a state of herd collapse. Lower calving success in herd B compared to A indicated differences in winter foraging conditions. However, we found only minor differences in animal body condition between the herds in autumn. We found no evidence that a lower autumn body mass generally increased the risk for a female of dying from one autumn to the next. We conclude that the prime driver of the on-going collapse of herd B is not high animal density or poor body condition. Accidents or disease seem unlikely as major causes of mortality. Predation, primarily by lynx and wolverine, appears to be the most plausible reason for the high female mortality and state of collapse in the studied reindeer herding community.