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REGISTRATION OPEN | Sámi Role in Arctic Affairs: Politics, Research and Activism

June 2, 2017

When: June 20, 2017 | 9:00am – 6:00pm
Where: UW Club, Yukon Room, University of Washington

Space is limited! Registration Required: Please email cweseuc@uw.edu with your name and institutional affiliation to register.
Preference will be given to those who plan to attend the full day.

Clock hours available to K- 12 Teachers upon request.
A light breakfast, lunch and dinner are provided

Since the 1970s the global Indigenous movement, building on the human rights movement, has gained considerable momentum. In 2000, the United Nations founded the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues as the central coordinating body for matters related to Indigenous peoples; in 2007, the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was ratified establishing international legal norms. Indigenous peoples are now playing a significant role in influencing international affairs via new transnational networks. The Sámi are a model for such influence.

Like the Inuit, the Sámi form a multi-nation state – Sápmi – home to approximately 100,000 Sámi from the northern parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland and the Kola Peninsula of Russia. Sámi culture and traditions evolved over thousands of years through a close relationship to the land. The traditional Sámi economy included fishing, hunting and reindeer herding and husbandry. Beginning in the 17th century the new Scandinavian states began a process of colonization including assimilation efforts. Through the mid-20th century the Sámi began mobilizing to protect their rights, forming one of the first international Indigenous organization in the world – the Sámi Council, 1956. In 2016, the Nordic Sámi Agreement was reached to safeguard Sámi constitutional rights and to maintain Sámi language and culture. The Sámi have made significant strides to ensure their rights as a people and to provide effective models for engaging in domestic and international relations.

The University of Washington is honored to host five special guests and delegates from Sápmi – Lis-Mari Hjortfors, Margaretha Uttjek, May-Britt Öhman, and Inge Frisk, as well as UW’s colleague from Pacific Lutheran University, Troy Storfjell, and UW’s doctoral candidate in Sámi Studies, Karin Eriksson. Most of the presenters are Sámi themselves, working with aspects on reclaiming Sámi identities and the struggle for the Sámi right to survival and well-being. Scholars and activists will present their work followed by an open discussion with all participants and guests.

This event is sponsored by the International Policy Institute (funded by a grant from Carnegie Corporation of New York) and Arctic and the International Relations initiative, Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies; the Canadian Studies Center, Center for European Studies, and Center for Global Studies, Jackson School (with Title VI grant funding from the Office of Post-secondary Education, International and Foreign Language Education, U.S. Department of Education); UW’s Scandinavian Studies; and UW’s Future of Ice initiative.

To request disability accommodation contact the Disability Services Office at least ten days in advance at:  (206) 543-6450/V, (206) 543-6452/TTY, (206) 685-7264 (FAX), or dso@u.washington.edu.