Knowledge Gaps about Mining Impacts on Sami Lands

A Call for Epistemic Justice in European Minerals Extraction

Authors

  • Laura Del Duca Stockholm Environment Institute
  • Adriana Abril Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
  • Rasmus Kløcker Larsen Stockholm Environment Institute
  • Biljana Macura Stockholm Environment Institute
  • Neal R. Haddaway Independent photographer and researcher
  • Maria Boström Sámiid Riikkasearvi (The National Association of the Sami People in Sweden, SSR)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36368/jns.v17i1.1232

Keywords:

green transition, epistemic justice, Indigenous, Sami, mineral extraction, environmental impact assessments

Abstract

In the context of the EU’s Critical Raw Materials Act, which prioritizes mineral extraction and imposes time limits on project approvals, there have been a surge of policy proposals that aim to expedite licenses for green industry projects. Meanwhile, the academic literature largely overlooks risks for Indigenous Sami rights and reindeer herding. In this paper, we examine if a similar knowledge gap exists in a key part of the practitioner literature informing licensing decisions for new mines, namely environmental impact assessments (EIAs). To do so, we undertake a comparative synthesis of results from i) unpublished findings from a review of selected EIAs from mining companies in Sweden, and ii) a review of Sami knowledge about impacts at two mining sites in Sweden. Findings reveal a considerable mismatch between predicted impacts in corporate EIAs and those impacts experienced by herding communities. Using an epistemic justice lens, we argue that this knowledge gap is no coincidence—instead it reflects an epistemic injustice underlying European and hence Swedish minerals policy and its ambitions to fast-track licensing and exploit Sami lands in the name of the green transition.

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Published

2025-06-18

How to Cite

Del Duca, L., Abril, A., Kløcker Larsen, R., Macura, B., Haddaway, N. R. and Boström, M. (2025) “Knowledge Gaps about Mining Impacts on Sami Lands: A Call for Epistemic Justice in European Minerals Extraction”, Journal of Northern Studies, 17(1), pp. 30–42. doi: 10.36368/jns.v17i1.1232.