Blar i Publikasjoner fra Cristin - NMBU på forfatter "Kaarhus, Randi"
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Food culture and child-feeding practices in Njombe and Mvomero districts, Tanzania
Mwaseba, Devota Joseph B; Kaarhus, Randi; Mvena, Zebedayo .S.K. (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2016)This article explores food culture and child-feeding practices, focusing on children below five years among the Bena and Luguru ethnic groups located in Njombe and Mvomero rural districts in Tanzania. In these two societies ... -
Knowing a coastal Sámi landscape in Finnmark: transmission and regeneration of knowledge and identity across three generations
Pedersen, Inger; Kaarhus, Randi (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)This article discusses the role of knowledge and practices related to the natural environment in constructing and regenerating identities as Coastal Sámi across generations. The discussion draws on empirical material from ... -
Knowledge Claims and Struggles in Decentralized Large Carnivore Governance: Insights From Norway and Sweden
Sjölander-Lindqvist, Annelie; Risvoll, Camilla; Kaarhus, Randi; Lundberg, Aase-Kristine Aasen; Sandström, Camilla (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)Ensuring sustainable carnivore populations while simultaneously sustaining active and viable pastoral communities often creates conflicts that are difficult to resolve. This article examines how different knowledge systems ... -
Land, investments and public-private partnerships: what happened to the Beira Agricultural Growth Corridor in Mozambique?
Kaarhus, Randi (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018) -
Mirrors and Contrasts: Zimbabwe and Zimbabweans in Manica, Mozambique
Kaarhus, Randi (Chapter, 2019) -
Struggling with ‘clear zoning’ - Dilemmas of carnivore-pastoral coexistence in Nordland, northern Norway
Risvoll, Camilla; Kaarhus, Randi (Chapter, 2020) -
The contested nature of Afro-descendant quilombo land claims in Brazil
Thorkildsen, Kjersti; Kaarhus, Randi (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)In Brazil, Afro-descendant quilombola communities were for the first time in history recognised as legal rights-holders to land in the 1988 constitution – 100 years after the abolition of slavery. Drawing on fieldwork in ...