Editor’s choice
Land, Racism and Discrimination: Sámi rights and contemporary colonialism in Sweden and Finland.
Anna-Maria Fjellström / Personal archives
2024–2027
Indigenous Peoples have for centuries resisted settler states and colonial administrations. The last decades bear witness of their success in the development of international human rights instruments and business standards.
Yet, many states have been reluctant to implement Indigenous land rights, leaving Indigenous Peoples in a paradox between legal recognition and administrative inaction. Indigenous land rights have also provoked opposition within settler communities, who consider them a threat to their own rights. Consequently, there has been a sharp growth of anti-Indigenous counter-movements across the world, resulting in hate speech and hate crimes against Indigenous peoples.
RADISAM combines theories of settler colonialism and structural approaches to racism to analyse the complex social forces that are driving anti-Indigenous racism and discrimination in the Nordics. Exploring how such racism intersects with struggles over Sámi land rights and impacts Sámi political agency is a novel approach. Two empirically rich cases, the Girjas legal case in Sweden, and the Sámi Parliament Act in Finland, will be studied in-depth and compared through theory-driven content analysis of formal policy documents, traditional and social media, and interviews. Our purpose is to examine Nordic settler colonialism and its links to contemporary discrimination of the Sámi to explain and prevent growth of anti- Sámi racism.
Other publication / Kapitel i Sanningskommissionens antologi om hur statens markförvaltning i Sápmi påverkar renskötsel och samiskt självbestämmande.
24 April 2026 / About Land use and Public policy
Project / The project's aim is to explore how to ensure inclusion of Sámi reindeer herding communities in the review of environmental licenses for hydropower.
2021 - 2025 / About Land use, Participation and Water resources
Project / An empirical investigation of "extraction contracting" between green transition industries and the Indigenous Sámi peoples.
2023 - 2027 / About Innovation, Land use and Renewables
Journal article / Tree Value Visions is a low-resource deliberative tool for inclusive, values-led urban treescape planning, grounded in the IPBES Life Framework.
13 July 2026 / About Forests
Journal article / Publicly accessible housing data and machine learning hold genuine promise for large-scale urban retrofit strategy.
30 June 2026 / About Public policy
Press release / SEI researchers publish analysis on whether “rights of rivers” initiatives have led to environmental protections.
29 June 2026 / About Participation and Public policy