Evenemang 2021

Fimvisning: Den ogröna vinden
Den ogröna vinden: samiska och naturvetenskapliga perspektiv på fossilberoende och miljöförstörande vindkraftsdesign, 2021, 18 min.
Filmvisningen följs av samtal under ledning av Arne Müller, journalist, med medverkande i filmen renskötare Henrik Andersson, Gällivare skogssameby, docent Eva Charlotta Helsdotter, CEMFOR, filmmakare Petri Storlöpare, samt Elle Eriksson, Tina Eriksson, Michael Eriksson, samtliga är renskötare i Flakabergsgruppen Gällivare skogssameby. Kommentarer av Irene Molina, professor i kulturgeografi och vetenskaplig ledare vid CEMFOR.
Datum: 27 oktober
Td: 15.15-17.00
Plats: sal 22-1017 Engelska parken - sänds också via Zoom här https://uu-se.zoom.us/j/64490948640
Hur kan rasismforskning ge ett bidra till förståelse av pågående vindkraftsexploatering i samiska områden? Stora vindkraftsindustriområden med upp till 1000 vindkraftverk är under planering och byggnation i Sábme - samiska områden. Svenska staten såväl som aktörer på energimarknaden, allmänhet, ideella miljöorganisationer och klimataktivister framhåller vindkraften som grön, fossilfri och miljövänlig, men stämmer det verkligen?
Arrangör: Centrum för mångvetenskaplig forskning om rasism, CEMFOR/Dàlkke: Indigenous Climate Change Studies: FORMAS och medarrangör Sameednama friddja universitehta.
Evenemang 2020

Zoom webinar – “Wīhkohkē: Urban Indigenous Resistance from the Past into the Future”
Datum: 28 april
Tid:13.00-16.00
Zoom länk: zoom link - Notera lösenord behövs: 024490
Urbefolkningen har kämpat för land och liv mot kolonialism över hela världen sedan ett halvt årtusende.
Program and speakers
13.00 May-Britt Öhman Introducing Dálkke: Indigenous Climate Change
13.15 Hampus Andersson When the climate apocalypse comes I’ll make it: 16 year old Hampus Andersson’s survival month living off the lands and waters in the forests of Norrbotten, Sweden
13.45 Henrik Andersson Winds of destruction: A documentary project on wind power, Indigenous people and human security –case from Hällberget, Överkalix, Gällivare Forest Sámi Reindeer Herding area
14.15 Eva Charlotta Helsdotter Who owns the river? Combining water resource management and Sámi traditional relationships with nature and waters for sustainable futures
14.45 Break/paus
15.15 Erica Violet Lee Wīhkohkē: Urban Indigenous Resistance from the Past into the Future
16.00 End
Erica Violet Lee, a feminist scholar of prairie Indigenous studies and Nēhiyaw philosophy, her work focuses on the intersections between social movements and bodily sovereignty. She is currently a master’s student at OISE, the University of Toronto, writing about urban Indigenous resistance and joy.
Abstract
In Canada, currently the Wet’suwet’en resistance movement is set to protect lands and waters against destructive extractive industry, which are allowed and supported by colonial state laws, and law enforcement. But what is law? From an indigenous standpoint, love and law are one and the same.
Disrupting the notion of “ceded and surrendered” lands and based on a methodology of urban Indigenous lifeways and survivance, and with the ongoing Wet’suwet’en resistance as one of many examples I will discuss what it means – in practice – to refuse consent for extractive projects on our lands. And to promote laws that are tied to love.
This refusal is tied to our freedom of movement and our agency as Indigenous women, girls, Two-Spirit and LGBTQ people on the frontlines of movements in North America and across the world.
Guided by frameworks of decolonial love and the resurgence of Indigenous law, language, and ceremony that have never fully been eliminated despite genocides, we embrace the experience of joy as an embodied treaty and a living act of sovereignty.
Based on my work of Wastelands theory (“In Defense of the Wastelands: A Survival Guide”, 2016), I argue that Indigenous presence and futurisms pose a necessary challenge to the notion that we are primitive or extinct people, as we shape and create the sacred and ceremonial through our movements on the land. At the end of this world, we work toward a universe of beautiful livelihoods for Indigenous communities, free from state oppression and coercion.
Abstract, Henrik Andersson: "Winds of destruction: A documentary project on wind power, Indigenous people and human security –case from Hällberget, Överkalix, Gällivare Forest Sámi Reindeer Herding area".
Abstract, Hampus Andersson: "When the climate apocalypse comes I’ll make it: 16 year old Hampus Andersson’s survival month living off the lands and waters in the forests of Norrbotten, Sweden".
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Dálkke is based at CEMFOR, Department of Theology at Uppsala University, and collaborates with Luleå University of Technology, Michigan State University and universities in Canada, US, Australia and Japan, as well as Indigenous communities and associations. The project forms part of ongoing efforts by Indigenous and allied scholars, knowledge keepers, scientists, change-makers, and leaders to create a field to support Indigenous peoples’ capacities to analyze and address the consequences as well as mitigate the impacts of anthropogenic climate change – thereby contributing to the establishment of the field Indigenous Climate Change Studies.

Welcome to an open seminar: Ziibaaska' iganagooday: The Ojibwe Jingle Dress Dance at 100
Brenda J. Child, Northrop Professor and Chair of the Department of American Studies at the University of Minnesota.
Datum: Tisdag 21 januari 2020
Tid: 10.00 - 12.00
Plats: Engelska Parken, UU, Thunbergsvägen 3C, House 22, room 22-1009
The talk will explain the history of the Jingle Dress Dance, an important dance tradition among American Indian women today, and why it is associated with both healing and anti-colonialism. The jingle dress dance began a hundred years ago among the Ojibwe, whose tribal nations are along the Great Lake and US and Canadian border, and number 200,000 people today. The talk will also discuss the dance at Standing Rock during the fall of 2016.
Brenda J. Child is Northrop Professor and Chair of the Department of American Studies at the University of Minnesota. She received her PhD in History at the University of Iowa. Child was born on the Red Lake Ojibwe Reservation in northern Minnesota where she is a citizen and member of a committee writing a new constitution for the nation of 12,000.
Child is co-founder of a major digital humanities project, the Ojibwe People’s Dictionary ojibwe.lib.umn.edu. Recently, she led a collaboration between University of Minnesota students and the Mille Lacs Ojibwe community on an exhibit, Ziibaaska’ iganagooday: The Jingle Dress at 100, at the Mille Lacs Indian Museum in Onamia, Minnesota, 2019-2020.
Organised by Dr May-Britt Öhman, within the research project Dálkke: Indigenous Climate Change Studies at the Centre for Multidisciplinary Studies on Racism, CEMFOR, Uppsala University, in collaboration with Sámeednama friddja universitehta - Sámi Land Free University, and UPPSAM – the association/network for Sámi related studies in Uppsala.

Climate Futures Workshop
Welcome to Climate Futures Workshop by Dálkke: Indigenous Climate Change Studies.
Datum: 13 november 2019
Tid: 09.00-17.00 (plus postseminarium och middag)
Plats: Engelska parken, Thunbergsvägen 3C, Uppsala universitet.
The purposes of the workshop are to:
- Present the ongoing work for discussion. What results do we have so far? How to proceed?
- Prepare for further applications to expand the research project and activities.
- Expand collaboration to interested, for future research projects and activities.
Program
09.00 Káffabådda Coffee
09.30 Introduction to Dálkke: Indigenous Climate Change Studies project and this workshop. May- Britt Öhman, project leader, CEMFOR, Uppsala University.
09.45-10.30 Indigenous IT innovations for environmental protection: The journey from Tannak´s birth 17 years ago and today with respect to its heritage within indigenous communities. Björn Lindgren, Susanne Spik and Karin Kuoljok, Tannak International AB.
10.30-11.15 Plants as innovators: On Oassje as a model for energy harvesting of flow-induced vibrations, Ida Jansson, Luleå University of Technology, Fluid and Experimental Mechanics.
11.15-13.00 Lunch Matikum, Kajutan, Engelska parken.
13.00 -14.30 Wind power in Sámi territories - fossil free, green and environmentally friendly? Eva Charlotta Helsdotter, Uppsala Univ, CEMFOR
13.45- 14.30 Knowledge from the Sámi past for a sustainable future - archeological and historical studies of Forest Sámi on the Swedish side of Sápmi, Gunilla Larsson, Uppsala University, CEMFOR.
14.30-15.15 Káffabådda Coffee
15.15-17.00 Seminar organized by CEMFOR, ”How do I tell an academic organisation that the land is a research participant?”: Reflections from an ongoing project on climate change and Indigenous perspectives. Frances Wyld, Doctor of communication, researcher, Australia, Dálkke: Indigenous climate change studies project participant
17.00-19.00 Post seminar mingle
19.00 Dinner at restaurant in Uppsala (participants at own cost)
The workshop is open to all interested free of charge. Lunch and dinner is at own cost for participants. Please register latest by November 4 at: https://forms.gle/Dq1onbtHdMnT4aMz7. Please note that the number of participants is limited, the registration will be closed down if we have reached the maximum earlier than Nov. 4.
Organised by the research project Dálkke: Indigenous Climate Change Studies, FORMAS Dnr 2017-01923, led by Dr May-Britt Öhman, Uppsala University, within the Swedish National research programme on climate.
Languages: We will present and talk in English, as we have a project participant from Australia. We will help each other with translation to and from Swedish, and if needed/possible also from other languages.
Welcome!
D´álkke: Indigenous Climate Studies - CEMFOR, Uppsala University

“How do I tell an academic organisation that the land is a research participant?: Reflections from an ongoing project on climate change and Indigenous perspectives”
Datum: 13 november 2019
Föreläsare: Dr Frances Wyld, är en Martu kvinna (Aboriginal people of the Pilbara region of Australia) och doktor i kommunikation.
Abstract: In this presentation I reflect on the methodology and ethical considerations of an Australian sub-project that is part of the research project Dálkke: Indigenous Climate Change Studies, funded by FORMAS, within the Swedish National Research Programme on Climate, and placed at the Centre for Multidisciplinary Studies on Racism, CEMFOR, at Uppsala University.
The Australian sub-project documents stories and opinions about climate change, caring for country and the use of Indigenous knowledges in design and innovation to better care for the environment. The work is ongoing during 2019 and the results will be presented at conferences and in articles during 2020. The methodology is a blend of western and Indigenous knowledges characterised by the logos and mythos of information gathering. The logos is the academic pursuit of knowledge on the subject undertaken through literature review and the interviewing of Indigenous academics. The mythos represents Storywork and the stories collected from Indigenous communities and people alongside the needs of this diverse land. But how do you give the land a voice in academia beyond what can be known within science? How do we tell an academic organisation that the land is a research participant? Ethical considerations involved in working with Indigenous communities are important, protocols in academia in Australia were put in place for this. Yet something has been lost in translation; a colonising voice had taken command yet again, leaving the land without a voice and the researcher disconnected from a fundamental participant in research - the environment itself.
Bio
Frances Wyld, Doktor i kommunikation. Hon har lärt sig inom områdena inhemska kunskaper, utbildning, kulturstudier och har arbetat inom läroplanutveckling. Hennes doktortitel "In the time of Lorikeets" /Lorikeets tid) använder autoetnografi, berättande och mytografi för att centrera inhemska kunskaper inom en akademisk miljö för att skapa en ursprungsuppfattning för etisk forskning och undervisning.
Hennes publikationer inkluderar både akademiska och kreativa skrivelement. Dr Wyld jobbar för närvarande med projektet Indigenous Australian perspectives on Climate Change. som leds av CEMFOR Uppsala universitet, för att undersöka klimatförändringar, urbefolkningsperspektiv och innovation.
Dálkke: Urfolksperspektiv på klimat Deltar i aotearoa, naisa konferens
Aotearoa (Nya Zeeland) Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Annual Meeting, 26-29 juni, 2019.
What is Indigenous Studies?
Datum: 20 mars, 2019, kl. 15:15-17:00, Lokal: Engelska parken, Hus 22, sal 22-1017.
Deltagare: Karin Eriksson, doktorand i Scandinavian Studies vid University of Washington, Seattle. Kaisa Huuva, doktorand i samiska studier vid Umeå universitet.
Intern seminarium: CEMFOR - Dálkke
Datum: 28 februari, 2019.
Presentationer av och ur forskningsprojektet Dálkke: Urfolksperspektiv på klimat. Deltagare kan su läsa här