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7 - Reflections on the Making of Norway

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2016

Ottar Brox
Affiliation:
University of Tromso and Senior Research Associate at NIBR (Norwegian Institute for Regional Research) in Oslo
John Bryden
Affiliation:
Professor, University of Aberdeen and Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute
Lesley Riddoch
Affiliation:
Director, Nordic Horizons
Ottar Brox
Affiliation:
Senior Researcher, Norwegian Institute of Urban and Regional Research
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

This chapter is an attempt to tell Scottish readers how another small, peripheral country became a reasonably economically efficient but relatively egalitarian nation – in marked contrast to the kingdom of which Scotland is a part. My contribution is based on a lifelong study of the history of modern Norway, fieldwork in many different local communities – mostly in the northern part of my country, where I grew up – and serious participation in local and national politics. But I have learned a lot about Norway through fieldwork and shorter trips to comparable situations abroad, in Newfoundland, Iceland and Scotland, where I have had the good fortune of having friends and colleagues like the late Robert Storey, his wife the Gaelic scholar Lisa Storey and our common friend, John Bryden.

In April 1964, I spent a week on Vatersay, at the southern tip of the Outer Hebrides. At that time, I worked as a research assistant on the project ‘Human geography studies of North Norway’ at Tromsø Museum. The anthropologists at the University of Edinburgh invited me as a visiting ‘Northern Scholar’ for a month, including a grant for travelling around the country.

I must admit that I, as an agricultural economist with some social anthropology and sociology in my tool chest, was rather unprepared for my North Norway project, which I tried to develop in the direction of finding differences between declining coastal villages and those that seemed to be able to survive – comparing their access to natural resources, ability to raise capital, access to markets, and so on. But my observations and conversations with people on Vatersay and Barra were a very important impulse to expand my set of interacting explanatory categories beyond ecology and local culture. The decisive importance of the politically manipulable rules of the economic game became very easy to discover – like in fields such as fish marketing and subsistence agriculture – and the natural conditions in Vatersay were favourable as compared with many Arctic local communities, where people carrying on subsistence agriculture and seasonal fishing fifty years ago enjoyed a living standard indeed comparable with urban wage labour anywhere.

Type
Chapter
Information
Northern Neighbours
Scotland and Norway since 1800
, pp. 154 - 163
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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  • Reflections on the Making of Norway
    • By Ottar Brox, University of Tromso and Senior Research Associate at NIBR (Norwegian Institute for Regional Research) in Oslo
  • Edited by John Bryden, Professor, University of Aberdeen and Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, Lesley Riddoch, Director, Nordic Horizons, Ottar Brox, Senior Researcher, Norwegian Institute of Urban and Regional Research
  • Book: Northern Neighbours
  • Online publication: 05 August 2016
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  • Reflections on the Making of Norway
    • By Ottar Brox, University of Tromso and Senior Research Associate at NIBR (Norwegian Institute for Regional Research) in Oslo
  • Edited by John Bryden, Professor, University of Aberdeen and Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, Lesley Riddoch, Director, Nordic Horizons, Ottar Brox, Senior Researcher, Norwegian Institute of Urban and Regional Research
  • Book: Northern Neighbours
  • Online publication: 05 August 2016
Available formats
×

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  • Reflections on the Making of Norway
    • By Ottar Brox, University of Tromso and Senior Research Associate at NIBR (Norwegian Institute for Regional Research) in Oslo
  • Edited by John Bryden, Professor, University of Aberdeen and Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, Lesley Riddoch, Director, Nordic Horizons, Ottar Brox, Senior Researcher, Norwegian Institute of Urban and Regional Research
  • Book: Northern Neighbours
  • Online publication: 05 August 2016
Available formats
×