The contested nature of Allemannsretten: Renegotiating local customs in periphery landscapes with small-scale farming
Informations
- Funding country
Norway
- Acronym
- LOCUS
- URL
- -
- Start date
- 1/1/2021
- End date
- 12/31/2025
- Budget
- 1,396,665 EUR
Fundings
Name | Role | Start | End | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
KLIMAFORSK - Large scale programme on Climate | Grant | - | - | 1,396,664 EUR |
Abstract
The Nordic tradition of freedom to roam in landscapes, named Allemannsretten in Norway, is increasingly contested. Small-scale farmers in Norwegian periphery landscapes feel challenged by ever more people that make use of the outfields to do new outdoor activities. One question that surface in conflicts, is what duties towards other people and vulnerable nature that accompany the use of Allemannsretten. To illuminate the unclear duty aspect of Allemannsretten, the LOCUS-project explores local customs, understood as an informal «law» that determines «good behaviour» within the frames of Allemannsretten. Local customs may differ between landscapes, depending on their natural qualities, culture, history, and much more. In a changing world with increased mobility, new technologies, and fluctuations in politics and economic life, landscapes and their use change. Hence, local customs in a specific landscape alters over time. Changes in collective understandings of good landscape behaviour are challenging small-scale farmers in the Reisa Valley in Northern Norway, where our main case is located. With reference cases outside Oslo, Norway, and in Finland and Iceland, we ask how local customs may be renegotiated and what may be at stake for humans, floras and faunas in such negotiations. Along the way, we consider local customs as collective assemblages where different knowledges and understandings of nature intersect and entangle. Not only Allemannsretten is contested, so is also the nature within which the right to roam freely is applied. Altogether, local customs concern peoples knowledge and ownership to nature and nature management. In the LOCUS-project, we acknowledge this experience-based ownership and its relevance to mitigate biodiversity loss and global warming. Hence, we also support this environmental engagement from below, through different activities organized together with our cooperative partners. During the first half year of the project, we have had start-up meetings with all cooperative partners and started up the fieldwork in the main case area of Reisadalen in October. Scientific dissemination activities in the period have included oral presentations in addition to two scientific journal articles. Adding to this, we have disseminated the project to the general public, through national media and at an open meeting in Tromsø concerning Allemannsretten in November.