I am interested in how the Sami used natural resources and shared them among themselves before the introduction of the first Reindeer Husbandry Act in 1886. In particular, I focus on the 17th and 18th centuries, when the Sami were still the dominant group in most of Swedish Lapland, and also held the majority in the district courts. An important part of my research is based upon K.B. Wiklund's collection of excerpts, which consists of more than 2500 excerpts of court protocols regarding Sami lands from the period 1645–1845. I have digitized this collection with the ultimate aim of setting up a geographical data base including all people and places mentioned. Also, I conduct more limited studies of specific research questions, for example Forest Sami fishing.
2024
Norstedt, Gudrun; Östlund, Lars
2023
Skrifter från Centrum för samisk forskning, 31
Niia, Lars Petter; Norstedt, Gudrun
2022
Samer i söder, Uppsala: Kungliga Vetenskapssamhället i Uppsala 2022 : 151-172
Norstedt, Gudrun
2022
Namn och bygd, Uppsala: Kungliga Gustav Adolfs Akademien 2022, (110) : 131-153
Norstedt, Gudrun
2021
Vardagsliv i kåta och stuga: bidrag från Vilhelminabiennalen 23-24 september 2019, Umeå: Johan Nordlander-sällskapet 2021 : 79-106
Norstedt, Gudrun
2021
Seasonal settlement in the medieval and early modern countryside, Leiden: Sidestone Press 2021 : 309-320
Norstedt, Gudrun
2021
Rural Landscapes: Society, Environment, History, Stockholm University Press 2021, Vol. 8, (1) : 1-15
Norstedt, Gudrun; Hasselquist, Eliza Maher; Laudon, Hjalmar
2021
Forest Ecology and Management, Elsevier 2021, Vol. 502
Östlund, Lars; Norstedt, Gudrun
2020
Skogssamisk vilja: en jubileumsantologi om skriften "Dat läh mijen situd", Karin Stenberg och skogssamisk historia och nutid, Umeå: Várdduo – Centrum för samisk forskning 2020 : 275-313
Norstedt, Gudrun
2020
Journal of field archaeology, Routledge 2020, Vol. 45, (1) : 16-28
Norstedt, Gudrun; Axelsson, Anna-Lena; Laudon, Hjalmar; et al.
I teach Sami historical land use in the Forest History course at SLU, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. I also lecture on how historical maps and data from airborne laser scanning (ALS, Lidar) can be used to find cultural remains in the field and analyse historical resource use.