Upcoming events focusing on or including a gender perspective in the Arctic.
Read MoreThe GEA Newsletters from the very beginning
Read MoreIn this commentary Dirk Gindt, Professor of Theatre Studies in the Department of Culture and Aesthetics and Head of Research in Theatre Studies at Stockholm University, pays tribute to female Sámi cultural workers and, in particular, the recently deceased actor and director Harriet Nordlund who was the co-founder of the world’s first professional Sámi theatre ensemble.
Read MoreThese GEA Materials in Focus include articles, podcasts and books about suicide and mental health in Arctic communities, as well as Indigenous knowledge and sustainability.
Read MoreA book about care, age politics, technology, intergenerational relations and migration in the Northern periphery.
Read MoreAn article about the use of Indigenous knowledge for a better understanding of Arctic environment.
Read MoreA video about how Greenland balances tourism and sustainable growth.
Read MoreA podcast about the collaborative strategies between Indigenous and Canadian law regarding environment protection.
Read MoreAn article that, through an intersectional approach, highlights the discrimination faced by some Arctic communities in relation to climate change.
Read MoreA book examining the perception of animals in Inuit culture and providing a better understanding of human-animal relationships in a hunting society.
By Frédéric Laugrand and Jarich Oosten.
Read MoreAn article on the protests of environmentalists, ecologists and Sami reindeer herders against Sweden's 'green transformation'.
Read MoreYouth mental health activists from Arctic countries address youth mental health and ways to smach the stigma associated with it.
Read MoreA podcast about the reasons of the Arctic’s Indigenous suicide crisis.
Read MoreAn article about Arctic Indigenous young people, structural violence, cultural continuity and selfhood.
Read MoreIn this video Eva-Maria Svenson presents one of the chpaters of the GEA Report - Law&Governance
Read MoreLill Tove Fredriksen, Associate Professor in Sámi Literature at UiT The Arctic University of Norway, discusses the Sámi language pre-, during and after Norwegianisation, taking four generations of her family’s women as a starting point.
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