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Sökning: WFRF:(Dahlin Johanna 1979 )

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1.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979- (författare)
  • Hur stor är en gruva? : Överlappandeproblemområden i en handläggningsprocess
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Nordisk Administrativt Tidsskrift. - : Djoef Forlag. - 2246-1310. ; 98:1
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Planerna på en järnmalmsgruva i Kallak utanför Jokkmokk i Norrbottens län har mött stortmotstånd, men har också ivriga förespråkare. Denna artikel analyserar de kontroversiellaplanerna genom att studera handläggningen av ansökan om bearbetningskoncession.Ärendet har handlagts i flera omgångar och två gånger hänskjutits till regeringen för beslut. Iskrivande stund, åtta år efter att ansökan gjordes, saknas ännu beslut i ärendet. Genom endiskussion av fallet Kallak vill jag belysa hur djupt politiska grundantaganden kommer in iförvaltningsprocessen och påverkar hur olika instanser agerar i ärendet. Artikeln bygger påen analys av material som har producerats och inkommit i processen i form av skrivelser ochyttranden. Handläggningsprocessen visar att frågan om att bevilja en bearbetningskoncessionär svåravgränsad och knuten till ett antal andra överlappande problemområden.Med den här artikeln vill jag bidra med förståelse för hur handläggningen i det här fallet intealls är konsensusdriven, teknisk fråga, utan hur konflikter mellan olika preferenser, värdenoch världsbilder kommer till uttryck i beslutsprocessen.
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2.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979-, et al. (författare)
  • Kamrater, det är vi
  • 2012
  • Ingår i: Kulturaliseringens samhälle. - : Linköping University Electronic Press. - 9789197727525 ; , s. 134-137
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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4.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979- (författare)
  • Labour of love and devotion? : The search for the lost soldiers of Russia
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Emotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the Present. - London : Routledge. - 9781138579293 - 9780815370024 - 9781351250962 ; , s. 25-38
  • Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This chapter describes the search for lost soldiers as an affective practice, which, following Margaret Wetherell. It shows that how discourse and physical work are entangled, and how emotion and affect play roles in the actual work and when the work is displayed. The goal of the activity is to find, identify and bury soldiers, but also to spread knowledge of the war. The search for lost soldiers is perhaps first and foremost hard work. The Russia-wide voluntary search movement carries out search work through relatively autonomous units in all areas of the country that saw direct fighting. The prominence of the war memory in contemporary Russia is an important background for the search movement. In an album called 'The Price of Victory' on a social network site, A. has posted pictures from the search, including unusually explicit photos of human remains.
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5.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979- (författare)
  • 'No one is Forgotten, Nothing is Forgotten' : Duty, Patriotism, and the Russian Search Movement
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Europe-Asia Studies. - : Routledge. - 0966-8136 .- 1465-3427. ; 69:7, s. 1070-1089
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This article discusses duty in relation to the past, focusing on Russia’s nationwide Search Movement (Poiskovoe dvizhenie). This civil movement of volunteers searches for the remains of fallen soldiers left on the battlefields of World War II all over Russia and has young people as its main target group. Despite in many ways being critical of the state, the Search Movement explicitly wants to make a contribution to the patriotic upbringing of Russian youth. In its work, the movement relates to the official government plans for patriotic education. Several obligations are central to the notion of patriotism: for the Search Movement, an obligation to the past, to remember, is the most important. In this article I will examine how the malleable concept of duty allows the Search Movement to carry out work implicitly critical of state failings in the name of patriotism.
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6.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979- (författare)
  • "Now you have visited the war" : the search for fallen soldiers in Russia
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Heritage of death. - London : Routledge. - 9781138217515 - 9781315440200 ; , s. 131-144
  • Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Millions of soldiers are still lying unburied on the Russian battlefields from the Second World War. Voluntary search units are trying to find and bury the remains of these soldiers and, if possible, identify them. Speaking about the war in the present tense when referring to the battlefields, this movement attempts to bring closure to the war seventy years after its end. The prime means to achieve this end is a proper burial. The search units spend extended amounts of time on the battlefields and build intimate knowledge of the area. The search units acts as both visitors and hosts of the battlefields, inviting others to come and see for themselves. The visitors they hosts fall into two major categories, relatives of fallen soldiers and tour participants. The act of visiting and spending time on the battlefields is part of connecting past and present, but the unfished business of unburied remains also makes the movement consider the past as present. All types of visits have a strong emphasis on commemoration and a ritual dimension, which links this practice to other practices termed pilgrimage.
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7.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979- (författare)
  • On not being there
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Culture Unbound. Journal of Current Cultural Research. - : Linköping University Electronic Press. - 2000-1525 .- 2000-1525. ; 9:3, s. 335-341
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This paper is an expression of the social anthropologist's frustration with not being there, and an attempt to deal with my own chronic disciplinary identity crisis and my "it's complicated" relationship with participant observation.1 I have worked for a long time now in an interdisciplinary setting, and although I sometimes characterize myself as an interdisciplinary bastard, I have retained a rather strong identification as an anthropologist. This identification is perhaps paradoxical as one of my main reasons for applying to an interdisciplinary PhD program was to get away from social anthropology. As a master's student, I became increasingly frustrated with anthropology and its insistence on ethnographic fieldwork as the one (and only) way to do research. I remember my annoyance with my supervisor's question, 'but how is this anthropology' as she was reading my proposals, until I finally included a passage on participant observation, which appeased her. I remember reading master's thesis upon master's thesis where it seemed to me that participant observation was actually quite ill-suited for investigating the issues at hand. And then, finally, I remember my relief when one of our professors tried to instil in us, that there are 'other ways of knowing about the world' than participant observation. I came to my PhD studies with a thematic I wanted to study: the memory and commemoration of the Second World War in Russia. It was a topic I far from exhausted in my master's thesis, and a doctoral dissertation later I could easily devote a few more years to it. I also had a vague idea on how to go about studying it. Participant observation was to be a part of it, but I did not envisage it as the main part. Through serendipity, I happened upon the search for fallen soldiers, and ended up doing far more anthropological fieldwork than I would ever have imagined. It was quite literally field work, where I took part in work on the former battlefields to locate the remains of soldiers, fallen but often officially listed as missing in action. It was heavy, dirty, cold (or sometimes too hot) and very participatory, even hands-on. It was in many ways life-changing; allowing me close. 
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8.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979- (författare)
  • The Continental Archipelago of Norilsk
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Karib - Nordic Journal for Caribbean Studies. - Stockholm : Stockholm University Press. - 1894-8421 .- 2387-6743. ; 6:1, s. 1-10
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyn made famous the image of the Soviet prison system Gulag as an archipelago. In this paper, Solzhenitsyn’s idea of the Gulag archipelago is juxtaposed with French Caribbean writer and philosopher Édouard Glissant’s notion of archipelagic thinking. The focus is on the mining city Norilsk in Northern Siberia, one of the “islands” in this penal geography, a city that was largely built using forced labour. It is a long way from the Caribbean to Siberia, but both archipelagos (real and conceptual) share a history that can be termed colonial. While the system that created this penal archipelago of the Gulag was, in Glissant’s terms, a manifestation of thoroughly continental thinking, complete with grand, universalizing tendencies, it may also be possible to sense the diversity and interconnectedness that he attributed to the archipelago. The case of Norilsk is examined through the 2017 documentary A Moon of Nickel and Ice by Canadian film-maker Françoise Jacob. Glissant’s ideas are used to open up and pose questions, rather than to provide definitive answers. 
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9.
  • Dahlin, Johanna, 1979-, et al. (författare)
  • Where does the Mine End
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Rivers of Emotion, Bodies of Ore. - Oslo : Not Yet Titled Press. - 9788293502180 ; , s. 118-128
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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  • Resultat 1-10 av 14

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