Whose Settler Colonial State? Arctic Railway, Changing State Space and Settler Self-Indigenization in Northern Finland
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26226Date
2022-08-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Junka-Aikio, LauraAbstract
Settler colonial theory has effectively highlighted the continuity of
colonial structures, but less attention has been paid on how also
the settler state has transformed over time, and how such changes
have affected the manifold relationships between the state, the
settlers and the natives. This article addresses trajectories of settler
colonial change in Finland, building on theories of state spatial
transformation and taking the recurring plans to build a Railway
across the Sámi homeland as its point of departure. The article
suggests that central to the change is the destabilization of the
relationship between the state and Northern Finland’s older,
‘endogenous’ settler communities. This has facilitated a popular
turn to settler self-Indigenization, whereby settlers make new
claims to being ‘Indigenous’, usually building on records of a
distant (possibly) Indigenous ancestor. Since self-Indigenization
directly challenges Indigenous self-determination, it articulates a
new form of elimination of the native. The task for critical
scholarship is not only to situate, contextualize and challenge such
identity claims, but also to question the logic that continues to set
especially older settler communities in opposition to Indigenous
rights and self-determination, in the context of extractive and
neoliberal development that ultimately may undermine both.
Publisher
RoutledgeCitation
Junka-Aikio LO. Whose Settler Colonial State? Arctic Railway, Changing State Space and Settler Self-Indigenization in Northern Finland. Postcolonial Studies. 2022Metadata
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