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Commoning in the periphery – The role of the commons for understanding rural continuities and change Cover

Commoning in the periphery – The role of the commons for understanding rural continuities and change

Open Access
|Mar 2017

Figures & Tables

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Figure 1

Map left: Scandinavia with the parish of Ängersjö. Map right: Ängersjö village Picture bottom left: View of Ängersjö from the early 1900s. Several of the farm buildings in the picture are now gone and some of them have been turned into seasonal residents. Photo: Ängersjö village archive. Map data left © Esri and right © Lantmäteriet, i2012/901.

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Figure 2:

Cattle herding to the forest pasture in Ängersjö 1964. Cattle herding to the common forest pastures would continue a few more years, before the more than thousand years old practice came to an end. Photo Knut Pålsson.

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Figure 3

Charcoal making at the forest museum. Photo: Bertil Larsson.

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Figure 4

Map displaying the spatial correlation between different commons over time. Areas with red colours signify “hot spots” of commons modelled from the archaeological record. The areas marked in red grid are the de juru commons remaining after the land reform. Adapted from Lindholm, 2013.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.729 | Journal eISSN: 1875-0281
Language: English
Published on: Mar 17, 2017
Published by: Uopen Journals
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2017 Emil Sandström, Ann-Kristin Ekman, Karl-Johan Lindholm, published by Uopen Journals
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.