3.8 Article

Tourism as a livelihood diversification strategy among Sami indigenous people in northern Sweden

Journal

ACTA BOREALIA
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 75-92

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08003831.2019.1603009

Keywords

Sustainable livelihoods; indigenous tourism; reindeer herders; diversification; Sami; Sweden

Funding

  1. project From Reindeer Herder to Tourist Entrepreneur - Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation

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Tourism entrepreneurship is frequently promoted as a livelihood strategy for Sami indigenous people living in northern Sweden. At the same time, tourism's ability to fully take over struggling primary sectors has been brought into question, due perhaps to a mismatch of skills or to tourism's seasonality and low pay. In spite of that, the role of tourism development might relate less to financial autonomy but could best be characterized as being supplementary and complementary to other occupations. Additionally, the motivations behind tourism involvement among Sami tourist entrepreneurs remain largely unknown. This interview-based study therefore aims to uncover why Sami indigenous tourist entrepreneurs living in northern Sweden get involved in tourism and to what extent tourism is part of a livelihood diversification strategy. The findings show that a combination of factors such as lifestyle choices, existing touristic demand and readily available forms of capital lead people to become tourist entrepreneurs. At the same time, for some respondents, tourism is part of a livelihood diversification strategy where its development is not sought for replacing a struggling traditional occupation, namely reindeer herding, but for complementing it.

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