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Use of Health Care in the Main Area of Sami Habitation in Norway – Catching up with National Expenditure Rates
ORIGINAL RESEARCH Use of health care in the main area of Sami habitation in Norway – catching up with national expenditure rates M Gaski, M Melhus, T Deraas, OH Førde University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway Submitted: 3 November 2010; Revised: 21 February 2011; Published: 31 May 2011 Gaski M, Melhus M, Deraas T, Førde OH Use of health care in the main area of Sami habitation in Norway – catching up with national expenditure rates Rural and Remote Health 11: 1655. (Online) 2011 Available: http://www.rrh.org.au A B S T R A C T Introduction: For many years political and professional concerns have centred on the health service access of Norway’s modern Indigenous Sami people. Thirty years ago, a study determined that a low rate of health expenditure on Sami patients had lead to inferior health services for the Sami people, with their average consultation rate 6 times lower than the Norwegian national average. Since 1980, there have been few studies of differences in the utilization of medical services between the Sami people and the rest of the Norwegian population. There are few official statistics relating to the ethnic category Sami. This study explored the present utilization of healthcare services among the Sami people by investigating Sami municipalities’ current expenditure on somatic hospital and specialist service. Methods: To assess the use of health care in Sami municipalities, data on expenditure of somatic hospitals and specialist services were retrieved from the Norwegian Patient Registry, and age- and sex-adjusted expenditure rates were calculated. Predominantly Sami and non-Sami municipalities were compared, as well as a comparison with the national average. -
Precambrian Stratigraphy in the Masi Area, Southwestern Finnmark, Norway
Precambrian Stratigraphy in the Masi Area, Southwestern Finnmark, Norway ARNE SOLLI Solli, A. 1983: Precambrian stratigraphy in the Masi area, southwestern Finnmark, Norway. Norges geol. Unders. 380, 97-105. The rocks in the Masi areaconsistsof acomformable stratigraphicsequencecontain ing three formations. The lowest is the Gål'denvarri formation, mainly containing metamorphic basic volcanics. Above this is the Masi Quartzite with a conglomerate at its base. The upper formation in the Masi area is the Suoluvuobmi formation containing metamorphic basic volcanics, metagabbros, mica schist, graphitic schist and albite fels. The eastern part of the area is dominated by granites which have an intrusive relationship to all three formations. Remnants of the Archean basement situated further to the east probably occur within the younger granites. Nothing conclusive can be said about the ages of the rocks, but for the Gål'denvarri formation an Archean age is considered most probable. The ages of the Meisi Quartzite and Suoluvuobmi formation may be Svecokarelian, but based on correlation with rocks in Finland, Archean ages also seem likely for these units. A. Solli, Norges geologiske undersokelse, P.0.80x 3006, N-7001 Trondheim, Norway. Introduction The central part of Finnmarksvidda is occupied by a dome structure of Archean granitic gneisses (Fig. 1). On each side of the dome are supracrustal rocks. To the east is the Karasjok region, and to the west is the Kautokeino- Masi region with the same types of rocks even though no direct correlation has yet been established between the two regions. Greenstones, quartzites and mica schist are the dominating rock types. A brief summary of the geo logy of Finnmarksvidda is given by Skålvoll (1978), and Fig. -
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Connecting and correcting : a case study of Sami healers in Porsanger Miller, B.H. Citation Miller, B. H. (2007, June 20). Connecting and correcting : a case study of Sami healers in Porsanger. CNWS/LDS Publications. CNWS Publicaties, Leiden. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/1887/12088 Version: Corrected Publisher’s Version Licence agreement concerning inclusion of doctoral License: thesis in the Institutional Repository of the University of Leiden Downloaded from: https://hdl.handle.net/1887/12088 Note: To cite this publication please use the final published version (if applicable). Connecting and Correcting A Case Study of Sami Healers in Porsanger Proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van Doctor aan de Universitet Leiden, op gezag van Rector Magnificus prof.mr. P.F. van der Heijden, volgens besluit van het College voor Promoties te verdedigen op woensdag 20 juni 2007 klokke 16.15 uur door Barbara Helen Miller geboren te Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, USA in 1949 Promotiecommissie: Promotor: Prof. Dr. J.G. Oosten Referent: Mw. Dr. N.J.M. Zorgdrager Overige leden: Prof. Dr. P.J. Pels Prof. Dr. P.J.M. Nas Mw. Dr. S.W.J. Luning Connecting and Correcting A Case Study of Sami Healers in Porsanger CNWS Publications Leiden CNWS Publications, Vol. 151 CNWS publishes books and journals which advance scholarly research in Asian, African and Amerindian Studies. CNWS Publications is part of the Research School of Asian, African and Amerindian Studies (CNWS) at Leiden University, The Netherlands. All correspondence should be addressed to: CNWS Publications c/o Research School CNWS Leiden University PO Box 9515, 2300 RA Leiden The Netherlands. -
Indigenous Internal Selfdetermination in Australia and Norway
i Indigenous internal self-determination in Australia and Norway by Pia Solberg A thesis in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Humanities & Languages Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences The University of New South Wales October 2016 iv Table of Contents Acknowledgments.........................................................................................................vii Language and terminology.............................................................................................ix Abstract..........................................................................................................................x Introduction.................................................................................................................11 Approaches to the problem.............................................................................13 Why compare with Norway and the Sami?.....................................................17 My approach..................................................................................................20 The structure of this thesis..............................................................................24 PART ONE: HISTORY MATTERS.............................................................................26 Chapter One. Early Colonisation...........................................................................27 Introduction........................................................................................................27 Sapmi: -
Tildelinger Vår 2020
Tildelinger vår 2020 Lokalsamfunnsløftet Finnmark • ADHD Norge Finnmark (konferanser) 25.000 til konferansen Elevvennlig skole. • Alta Golfklubb (idrett) 120.000 kroner til klubbutvikling 2020-2022. • Alta IF (idrett) 1.410.000 kroner til klubbutvikling 2020-2022. • Alta IF (idrett) 28.200 kroner til deltakelse i nasjonal serie håndball. • Alta IF (idrett) 34.627 kroner til Altaturneringen i håndball. • Alta IF (idrett) 350.000 kroner til Altaturneringen 2020-2022. • Alta IF (idrett) 40.000 kroner til Altaturneringen 2020. • Alta IF (idrett) 86.000 kroner til treerbaner. • Alta IF Ski (idrett) 270.000 kroner til klubbutvikling 2020-2022. • Alta Kvenforening (kultur)15.000 kroner til kulturelt innslag under vinterfestivalen. • Alta mannskor (kultur) 10.000 kroner til 17.mai dugnad til sang og spilling. • Aronnesrocken (kultur) 400.000 kroner til Alta Live 2020. • Audioland AS (kultur) 35.000 kroner til bestillingsverk og konsert under Sami Music Week. • Audioland AS (kultur) 65.000 kroner til påskekonsert 2020. • Bergsfjord Jeger og Fisk (friluftsliv) 10.000 kroner til Fiskefest Bergsfjord 2020. • Bergsfjord Utviklingslag (kultur)35.000 kroner til Liv i Loppa 2020. • Berlevåg Kommune (annet) 13.000 kroner til frivillighetssentralens formiddagskafé. • Billefjord Idrettslag (idrett) 25.000 kroner til radiokommunikasjon for dommere. • Bjørnevatn Idrettslag (idrett) 86.000 kroner til innkjøp av to treerbaner. • Bloch Bygg og Materialhandel AS (annet) 50.000 kroner til Næringslivsprisen 2019. • Bossekopp Ungdomslag (idrett) 26.000 kroner til oppgradering i BUL-hallen. • Brennelv Bygdelag (friluftsliv) 29.500 kroner til løypeslodd. • Brystkreftforeningen Kirkenes og Omegn (annet) 10.000 kroner til fatigue minisminar. • Båtsfjord historie og museumslag (kultur) 21.500 kroner til to brannsikre skap. -
The Precambrian Schists and Gneisses of Lakselv Valley, Northern Norway
The Precambrian schists and gneisses of Lakselv valley, northern Norway. liV DWIGHT CROWDER With 2 text-figures and 2 plates Abstract. The principal rocks of the Lakselv valley area are well-foliated hornblende schist and mica-quartz schists and lesser amounts of quartzite and marble. The hornblende schist overlies most of the mica-quartz schists and in several places is interlayered with them on a small scale. The structure of these layered rocks consists of several broad folds trending and plunging easterly. Most of these rocks probably represent sediments that were metamorphosed in Pre cambrian time under conditions of the epidote-amphibolite facies. Some of the hornblende schist has been transformed to small masses of hornblende gneiss and diorite, and a large sill of quartz diorite and a small stock of granite have been emplaced. These rocks, which were originally more or less massive, have been metamorphosed to gneisses; this metamorphism obscures their original mode of emplacement. More recently, horblende schist has been converted into chlorite schist in shear zones, and small sills of ultrabasic rock have been emplaced. Introduction. The Lakselv valley is at the head of Porsangerfjord on the north coast of Northern Norway (see Fig. 1). The rocks described in this report are the metamorphic rocks which occur in the Lakselv valley from Porsangerfjord on the north to near the hamlet of Skoganvarre on the south. Near the southern boundary the otherwise extensive out crops in Lakselv valley become very scarce due to a blanket of moraine. The metamorphic rocks of the valley are overlain uncomformably in the abrupt valley sides by beds of Caledonian sedimentary rocks; the contact between these sedimentary rocks and the metamorphic rocks forms the east and the west limits of the mapping. -
Den Samiske Befolkning I Nord-Norge
ARTIKLER FRA STATISTISK SENTRALBYRÅ NR. 107 DEN SAMISKE BEFOLKNING I NORD-NORGE SÁMI ÁL'BMUT DAVVI-NORGAS Av Vilhelm Aubert Båk'te THE LAPPISH POPULATION IN NORTHERN NORWAY OSLO 1978 ISBN 82-537-0843-2 FORORD L samband med Folke- og boligtelling 1970 ble det i en del utvalgte kretser i Nordland, Troms og Finnmark gjennomført en tilleggsundersøkelse med det formål å gi statistikk over den samiske tilknytningen til de personene som bodde i kretsene. Tall har tidligere vært offentliggjort i Statistisk ukehefte nr. 16-17/76 og Nye distriktstall nr. 4/76 for Nordland, Troms og Finnmark. Statistisk Sentralbyrå har bedt forfatteren analysere statistikken fra tilleggsundersøkelsen. I denne artikkelen søker han å avgrense den samiske befolkningen, og å beskrive den ut fra demografiske og sosiale kjennemerker: Dessuten sammenlikner han den samiske befolkningen i ulike deler av Nord-Norge, og analyserer den. samiske befolkning som en del av hele befolkningen i landsdelen. Statistisk Sentralbyrå, Oslo, 13. mars 1978 Petter Jakob Bjerve PREFACE In connection with the Population and Housing Census 1970 an additional survey was carried out in pre-selected census tracts in Nordland, Troms and Finnmark. The purpose was to give information on persons with Lappish connection resident in the tracts. Figures are previously published in Weekly Bulletin of Statistics no. 16-17/76 and New District Figures no. 4/76 for Nordland, Troms and Finnmark. Central Bureau of Statistics asked the author for an analysis of the information from the additional survey. In this article he tries to mark the bounds of the Lappish population and to give a description based on demographic and social characteristics. -
New Users and Changing Traditions—(Re)Defining Sami Offering Sites
European Journal of Archaeology 0 (0) 2015, 1–27 New Users and Changing Traditions— (Re)Defining Sami Offering Sites TIINA ÄIKÄS1 AND MARTE SPANGEN2 1Department of Archaeology, University of Oulu, Finland 2Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden Sami are indigenous people of Northern Fennoscandia. Some Sami offering sites have been used for over a thousand years. During this time, the offering traditions have changed and various people have started using the places based on different motivations. Present day archaeological finds give evidence of both continuing traditions and new meanings attached to these sites, as well as to sites that were probably not originally used for rituals in the Sami ethnic religion. In some cases, the authenticity of the place seems to lie in the stories and current beliefs more than in a historical continuity or any specifically sacred aspects of the topography or nature it is situated in. Today’s new users include, for example, local (Sami) people, tourists, and neo-pagans. This paper discusses what informs these users, what identifies certain locations as offering sites, and what current users believe their relationship to these places should be. What roles do scholarly traditions, heritage tourism, and internal culture have in (re)defining Sami offering sites and similarly what roles do ‘appropriate’ rituals have in ascribing meaning to particular places? How do we mediate wishes for multivocality with our professional opinions when it comes to defining sacredness? Keywords: Sami, offering site, multivocality, authenticity, site biographies INTRODUCTION offering sites in Finland. Results from exca- vations on two sacred islands in 2006 and During the twentieth century, research on 2007 led to the launching of the project Sami offering sites, including any exca- ‘Human-Animal Relations among Fin- vations, was, to a large extent, performed land’sSami’, funded by the Academy of by ethnographers (e.g. -
Circling Concepts Marte Spangen
STOCKHOLM STUDIES IN ARCHAEOLOGY 70 Circling Concepts Marte Spangen Circling Concepts A Critical Archaeological Analysis of the Notion of Stone Circles as Sami Offering Sites Marte Spangen ©Marte Spangen, Stockholm University 2016 ISSN 0349–4128 ISBN 978–91–7649–488–2 Printed in Sweden by Holmbergs, Malmø 2016 Distributor: Publit Cover: The Geaimmejávri structure with the lake in the background in late September 2012. Photo by the author To Tine (1941–2014) Contents Acknowledgements ................................................................................... xii Preface ......................................................................................................... xv 1 Introduction ....................................................................................... 17 1.1 Sami pasts.................................................................................................... 20 1.2 Sami archaeology ....................................................................................... 24 1.3 Sami cultural heritage management ....................................................... 27 1.4 Outline of the thesis ................................................................................... 31 2 “Sami circular offering sites” – genesis and implications ........ 33 2.1 A theoretical outline ................................................................................... 34 2.2 Research history – the construction of a category ............................... 40 2.2.1 Early sources describing circular offering -
An Oral History of Professional Nurses' Wartime Practice in Finnmark
“I learned to trust myself” An oral history of professional nurses’ wartime practice in Finnmark Ingrid Immonen1 Introduction Increasing significance in treatment and care is given to the patients’ life history. As Øyvind Finne shows, war experience also influences the children and grandchildren of those who were living the war (Finne 2005). Knowing something about local history as well as life history is vital in the meeting with patients and in care situations. In the 1990s there was little in textbooks about nursing in northern parts of Norway during the War, what impact it had on health in civil society, and how this influenced the work of nurses and health care personnel. Through projects “Finnmark during war and reconstruction” (Immonen 1999) and “Living the War”2 light is shed on special challenges for nurses in Northern Norway during World War II and reconstruction. Finnmark is the northernmost county in Norway. It is, on a Norwegian scale, a vast county with an area of 48,637 km2, and population of approximately 73,000. This means the area covers 15% of the Norwegian mainland, and 1.5% of the country’s total population.3 Due to the long distances and scarce population, people living here have, to a certain degree, always been dependent on their own skills for daily life. This also applies to health care. War affected Norway in different ways in different parts of the country. Sea passages past northern parts of Norway were important for transportation of supplies to allied forces through the North-West Soviet. There was also the Litza frontier in the east, close to the Norwegian border. -
Porsanger Kommune Planutvalget
Porsanger kommune Møteinnkalling Utvalg: Planutvalget Møtested: Ordførers kontor, Rådhuset Dato: 17.10.2013 Tid: 09:00 Forfall meldes til offentlig servicekontor på telefon 78 46 00 00, eller pr e-post: [email protected] . Offentlig servicekontor sørger for innkalling av varamedlemmer. Varamedlemmer møter kun ved spesiell innkalling. Lakselv 11.10.2013 Knut-Roger Hanssen Ordfører (sign.) Gunnar Lillebo Rådmann SAKSLISTE Saksnr Innhold Lukket PS 87/13 Godkjenning av innkalling PS 88/13 Godkjenning av saksliste PS 89/13 Godkjenning av protokoll fra forrige møte. RS 7/13 Orientering fra planlegger PS 90/13 Klage på vedtak - søknad om dispensasjon for oppføring av hytte på GBnr 5/96 i Olderfjord. PS 91/13 Søknad om dispensasjon fra kommuneplanens arealdel LNF-område til oppføring av hytte på GBnr 25/3 i Skoganvarre. PS 92/13 Søknad om dispensasjon fra avstand bestemmelsene til nabogrense, § 29-4 i plan- og bygningsloven, for oppføring av tilbygg til til bolig på GBnr 17/185 - Meieriveien 18, Lakselv. PS 93/13 Søknad om dispensasjon fra bestemmelsene om avstand til nabogrense, § 29-4 i plan- og bygningsloven, til oppføring av garasje på GBnr 34/247 - Børselv. PS 94/13 Søknad om dispensasjon for oppføring av tilbygg til eksisterende bolig og nybygg garasje på GBnr 16/385 - Rantiveien 1, Lakselv. PS 95/13 Klage på vedtak - Søknad om dispensasjon for oppføring av tre bygg på GBnr 20/47 ved Lakselva. 1 PS 87/13 Godkjenning av innkalling PS 88/13 Godkjenning av saksliste PS 89/13 Godkjenning av protokoll fra forrige møte. RS 7/13 Orientering fra planlegger 2 Porsanger kommune Arkivsak: 2012/2387 -20 Arkiv: 5/96 Saksbeh: Viktoria Paulsen Dato: 17.09.2013 Saksfremlegg Utv.saksnr Utvalg Møtedato 90/13 Planutvalget 17.10.2013 Klage på vedtak - søknad om dispensasjon for oppføring av hytte på GBnr 5/96 i Olderfjord. -
Additional Observations on the Northern Norway
ADDITIONAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE ROCK FORMAT I ONS OF FINMARKEN, NORTHERN NORWAY BY OLAF HOLTEDAHL (WITH TEXT-FIGURES PLATES) 16 AND 4 Introduction. I n 1918 the \vriter published a paper "Bidrag til Finmarkens Geologi'' giving the results of investigations carried out during the summers 1914 1917 in various districts of Finmarken, the most northern area of continental Europe. Two districts, viz. the Alten district in the west, and the area at the upper end of the Varanger Fjord in the east, were studied in some detail and geological maps on a scale l l 00 000, prepared 1. In various other areas, as in the Porsanger : and Tana districts and on the north coast of the Varanger Peninsula, more scattered observations were made. On the basis of these studies the rock underground of Fin- marken2 was divided into the following main groups3: A. Pre-Cambrian basement rocks. B. Hyolithus zone, of Lower Cambrian age. C. Do1omite-bearing sandstone division (in which is included the Raipas series of T. DAHLL, as far as the Alten area is concerned). D. Tillite-bearing sandstone division. E. Metamorphic complex (including igneous rocks of the Cale donian mountain range), to the south-east overlying the divisions B, C, or D, with thrust contact. In the non-metamorphic rocks, S. E. of this contact, I found, in the Porsanger area, the following stratigraphical sequence: Pre- They are published on a scale l 200 000. l : Concerning previous views on the geology of Finmarken and the age of the rocks z l may refer to the first chapter of my paper of 19 18.