• Impacts of tertiary education on the social status of women, in relation to local social obligations and expectations: a case study from Mababe, Botswana 

      Segadimo, Golang (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2018-05-15)
      This project is about how exposure to different cultural values can impact the indigeneity of women. It focuses of how the culture of the majority, which is mostly imposed on these indigenous women through education and tertiary institutions, impacts the choices they make, as compared to the expectations and obligations of own community. I am using the case study on one indigenous group located in ...
    • Impacts of Urbanization and Development Activities on Sustainable Development and Resource Management of the Majhi People of Nepal 

      Acharya, Jagadish (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2018-05-18)
      This study deals with how the Majhi people who are dependent on rivers for livelihood are affected by the rapid growth of urbanization and development activities. Due to the urbanization and development activities, they not only lost their traditional occupations like boating and fishing in the rivers but also are forced to displace from the native territory. Overall, it talks about their traditional ...
    • Implementing Act 31 in Wisconsin. An Exploration of the History, the Act, and the Educators Who Make it Happen 

      Reis, Kendyl Michaela (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2019-11-11)
      Wisconsin Act 31, also known as Act 31, was signed into law in 1991 and requires Wisconsin schools to teach Indigenous studies in their classrooms. Act 31 was passed in response to a turbulent time in Northern Wisconsin when Ojibwe, who were exercising their treaty rights to spearfish, were confronted with white Wisconsinites, who protested against those rights. This time period was dubbed The Treaty ...
    • Indentured servitude to post-freedom predicament. A study of oppression of young Tharu Kamlari women of Dang, Nepal 

      Basnet, Bhakta Bahadur (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2016-11-01)
      This study reflects on the predicament of the young Tharu Kamalri women after their legal emancipation in 2013, who had formerly been subjected to be the victims of bonded servitude in the name of the Kamlari system prevailing in Dang district of western Nepal. This study presents and analyses the accounts of the lives of young Kamlari women during their years in servitude, along with their ...
    • Indigenous Climate Justice - Insights from Sápmi: An Analysis of Public Presentations and Policy Documents from Sámi Sources 

      Pellennec, Laila (Mastergradsoppgave; Master thesis, 2023-05-14)
      Abstract This thesis examines the concept of indigenous climate justice in a Sámi political context. The green transition taking place in Europe and globally requires resources such as minerals and land. Research shows that these green transition projects place a burden on different indigenous groups around the world, and their voices and concerns are seldomly addressed by those making climate ...
    • Indigenous Cultural Tourism and the Discourse of Development among the Batwa of Mgahinga, South-Western Uganda 

      Kagumba, Andrew Kalyowa (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2013-05-20)
      This thesis focuses on the Batwa peoples of Mgahinga area, located in Kisoro District, South-western Uganda. Once inhabitants of the rain forests in South-western Uganda, the Batwa’s livelihood was abruptly distracted in 1991 when the Government of Uganda forcefully them from their ancestral lands for the establishment of Mgahinga Gorilla National Park. This forced eviction of the Batwa communities ...
    • Indigenous Efflorescence and Tjåenieh in Southern Saepmie. Rethinking Language Revitalization Research in Conversation with a Saemie Illustrator 

      Gjelde-Bennett, Kaja Nan (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2020-05-22)
      Proclaiming an international Indigenous societal revolution is taking place, anthropologist and language revitalization researcher, Gerald Roche develops the concept of Indigenous efflorescence to identify and investigate sites of Indigenous language and cultural flourishing in spite of colonialism. Conversely, the South Saemie language has been framed as “severely endangered” and the community a ...
    • Indigenous people’s access to land in northern-belt of Bangladesh : a study of the Santal community 

      Das, Smritikana (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2011-06-15)
      Indigenous land access in Bangladesh is limited at local levels as well as national levels, since indigenous peoples have no political recognition and documentary evidence provided by the government. The present research attempts to uncover the level of indigenous people’s land access on what is believed to be their informally inherited common property. It deals with the history of land access of ...
    • Indigenous water rights : a case study of the Quechua people from Chinchero, Peru. 

      Cárdenas, Rosa Inquiltupa (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2007-12-07)
      In this thesis I discuss and show how the unequal distribution of water rights results in a deprivation of economic, social, and cultural prospects for the indigenous peoples in Chinchero. I attempt to illustrate that Peruvian water legislation does not belong to the same context as the indigenous people’s cultural perception. Firstly, the Peruvian legal context based on the national Constitution ...
    • Indigenous wellbeing in university spaces. Experiences of indigenous students at the Australian National University 

      Powell, Maeve Shirley (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2017-05-15)
      This thesis aims to address the issue of Indigenous Australian conceptions of wellbeing in the context of university education. It will examine the role of an Indigenous student support unit in providing a space in which Indigenous wellbeing is enacted, supported and strengthened. The findings are based on discussions with six Indigenous students who were enrolled at the Australian National University ...
    • The Institutional Process of Repatriation of Indigenous Heritage: The Case of the Sami Drum Freavnantjahke gievrie 

      Opitz, Swantje (Mastergradsoppgave; Master thesis, 2023-05-15)
      This paper addresses the repatriation debate about the South Sami Freavnantjahke gievrie that was taken from its owner, the Sami Bendix Andersen Frennings Fjeld, in 1723 by the missionary Thomas von Westen. After the confiscation, the drum came to the Danish royal family and was gifted in 1757 to the noble family Saxony-Hildburghausen in what is now Thuringia, Germany. Today the gievrie is in ...
    • IS THE RAINBOW AN ILLUSION? Educational Programmes and the Adivasi Peoples during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Kerala, India 

      Sarala Nanu, Athul (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2021-11-24)
      Just like any other field, education was drastically affected by the COVID-19 pandemic all over the world. In the state of Kerala, the Adivasi peoples were the most impacted peoples by the pandemic and its ramifications. The normalised underlying disparities were exacerbated with the crisis that emerged at the onset of the pandemic and exposed the social inequalities in place regarding the state’s ...
    • The Journey of Nepal Bhasa. From Decline to Revitalization 

      Maharjan, Resha (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2018-05-18)
      Nepal Bhasa is a rich and highly developed language with a vast literature in both ancient and modern times. It is the language of Newar, mostly local inhabitant of Kathmandu. The once administrative language has been replaced by Nepali (Khas) language and has a limited area where it can be used. The language has faced almost 100 years of suppression and now is listed in the definitely endangered ...
    • Journeys to the Free World. Sámi and Norwegian border pilots during World War II in Nordland County 

      Pavall, Simon (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2016-05-18)
      The Second World War had a great impact on. For Norwegians, the War contributed to create a national identity, based on a shared oppression from a military invasion and resistance. Because of the war, many people fled to Sweden. Most of those refugees needed help from border pilots. In some areas Sámi border pilots was important because they knew the area very well indeed. Some of them were closely ...
    • Justice administration based on indigenous law in the Miskito community of Karata, North Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua 

      Rojas Hooker, Sandra Carolina (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2008-05-30)
      This thesis discusses the Justice Administration System in Karata and the influence of Positive Law over the Indigenous Law or vice versa. The research was based primarily on participatory observation, focus group discussion, interviews with key person and literature review regarding Indigenous law, legal pluralism and conflict resolution. The conclusions reached was that Justice Administration ...
    • KNIVES OF SEBEI Women, Ritual and Power. Sabiny Perception on Female Genital Mutilation and Advocacy Programs. 

      Nalaaki, Ritah (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2014-05-20)
      For hundreds of years, the Sabiny have performed female circumcision as a cultural practice that initiates adolescent girls into adulthood/womanhood. However in the recent past, the community has come under sharp criticism from the Ugandan government and other concerned parties such as non-governmental organizations. The government has even gone a step further and criminalized the practice. Nevertheless, ...
    • Land use management in an indigenous rights context: Reindeer herding and tourism. The case of Jämtlandstriangeln 

      Karestrand, Amanda (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2023-05-15)
      This thesis studies a case of indigenous and non-indigenous relations in Jämtland, Sweden. The studied area is subject to multiple interests in land-use, and this study focuses on the relation between indigenous Sámi reindeer herding and outdoor tourism. The area has a long history of both mountain tourism and reindeer herding, but in recent years tourism has increased to new levels and the Sámi ...
    • The leadership impact of Karamojong teachers on the enrolment and retention of learners in Moroto municipality government primary schools, Uganda 

      Ssejjemba, Bukirwa Loy (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2023-05-14)
      Despite the efforts of the government of Uganda to train school leaders in the Karamoja region, the enrolment and completion rate of Karamojong pupils in Moroto municipality primary schools remains low. Previous research attributes this to historical and environmental factors that promote Karamojong parents’ failure to attach value to formal education. This study analyses the leadership impact of ...
    • Learning Discomfort and Uncertainty: The KAIROS Blanket Exercise as a Canadian Settler Education Tool 

      MacCormick, Sarah (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2021-06-01)
      The KAIROS Blanket Exercise is an experiential learning activity that takes participants in Canada through Indigenous history in North America from an Indigenous perspective. In a 90- minute workshop, participants embody the role of Indigenous peoples and walk on blankets that represent the land. Through the reading of scripts, they re-enact the chronology of Canadian history and the processes ...
    • Learning Sealing: Traditional Knowledge Strengthening Awareness of Being Greenlandic Today 

      Rosendahl, Sally (Master thesis; Mastergradsoppgave, 2013-05-13)
      This thesis investigates in which ways learning ‘traditional’ knowledge such as seal hunting is a strengthening factor for the awareness of being Greenlandic today. It looks at knowledge transfer between one generation and the next as well as the role of knowledge transfer in the education system. Finally, the tension or interplay between possessing traditional knowledge and living as a modern people ...