ACADEMIC JOURNAL
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ISSN 2542-1077 (Print) ISSN 1994-5973 (Online) |
Ethnology, anthropology and ethnography |
Ivanova M. V. | Barents Centre of the Humanities – the Branch of the Federal Research Centre “Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences” |
Shabalina O. V. | Barents Centre of the Humanities – the Branch of the Federal Research Centre “Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences” |
Keywords: Sámi social justice colonization customary law Kola Peninsula traditional households |
Summary: The article is based on the analysis of ethnographic literature dating back to the late XIX and the early XX centuries,
as well as folklore and archival sources. It examines the historical and cultural context and the current existence of a
specific subjective concept of social justice in the economy of traditional households, historically formed by the local
Arctic population – the Sámi of the Kola Peninsula. When contemplating this concept, criteria of strict equality in
distribution, productivity and principles of needs satisfaction were identified. It is noted that under the state policy of
colonizing the Murmansk coast of the Kola Peninsula starting with 1860, the region initiated new economic relations,
governed by the norms of all-Russian legislation and “colonization” legal acts which were prepared speculatively,
without taking into account the specific rights of the indigenous people. Using the example of the analysis of archival
sources deposited in the State Archive of the Murmansk region, the authors show that in 1870 and 1871, when the Sámi
of the Kola-Lopar district used legal means of upholding their ideas about social justice in the process of resolving
possessory conflicts, declarative justice was on their side, and not on the side of the colonists, despite their resettlement privileges. |
Displays: 551; |