Mobility Practices and Gender Contracts: Changes in Gender Relations in Coastal Areas of Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11710Date
2017-09-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Gerrard, SiriAbstract
This article addresses the relationship between gender contracts and
mobility practices in fishery communities of Norway’s High North,
mainly Skarsvåg, Finnmark. By combining perspectives from gender
research, anthropology and geography, the aim of this article is to
contribute to a greater understanding of the interrelations between
structural, material, and cultural changes in the context of a smallscale
coastal fishing environment. My main question is whether
changes in mobility practices, related to restructuring of the fisheries
by means of a quota-system, Norway’s agreement with the European
Union (EEA) and other changes in the Norwegian context, have had
impacts on gender contracts and in what way. Emphasis lies on the
period after World War II and until today. The data collection are
based on a lifelong engagement on gender questions in fishery
villages, reading newspapers and using registers as well as interviews
and participant observation through several research projects.