scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Lapland

EducationRovaniemi, Finland
About: University of Lapland is a education organization based out in Rovaniemi, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Arctic & Indigenous. The organization has 665 authors who have published 1870 publications receiving 39129 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Rovaniemi & Lapin yliopisto.
Topics: Arctic, Indigenous, Climate change, Tundra, Tourism


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors analyzes the role of personal guarantees and collateral in the context of two different lending structures: one transaction and the other relationship based, and analyzes how personal guarantees affect the performance of two types of loans.
Abstract: This study analyzes the role of personal guarantees and collateral in the context of two different lending structures: one transaction and the other relationship based. The innish bank data, which ...

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the full-Stokes finite element code Elmer/Ice to model the 3D flow over the whole ice cap and used a Robin inverse method to infer the basal friction from the surface velocities observed in 1995.
Abstract: The dynamics of Vestfonna ice cap (Svalbard) are dominated by fast-flowing outlet glaciers. Its mass balance is poorly known and affected dynamically by these fast-flowing outlet glaciers. Hence, it is a challenging target for ice flow modeling. Precise knowledge of the basal conditions and implementation of a good sliding law are crucial for the modeling of this ice cap. Here we use the full-Stokes finite element code Elmer/Ice to model the 3-D flow over the whole ice cap. We use a Robin inverse method to infer the basal friction from the surface velocities observed in 1995. Our results illustrate the importance of the basal friction parameter in reproducing observed velocity fields. We also show the importance of having variable basal friction as given by the inverse method to reproduce the velocity fields of each outlet glacier - a simple parametrization of basal friction cannot give realistic velocities in a forward model. We study the robustness and sensitivity of this method with respect to different parameters (mesh characteristics, ice temperature, errors in topographic and velocity data). The uncertainty in the observational parameters and input data proved to be sufficiently small as not to adversely affect the fidelity of the model.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a piece of writing about suppressed thoughts and feelings that their collective picket line allows us to express, which is a form of emancipatory initiative where we care for each other as writers and as human beings.
Abstract: This piece of writing is a joint initiative by the participants in the Gender, Work and Organization writing workshop organized in Helsinki, Finland, in June 2019. This is a particular form of writing differently. We engage in collective writing and embody what it means to write resistance to established academic practices and conventions together. This is a form of emancipatory initiative where we care for each other as writers and as human beings. There are many author voices and we aim to keep the text open and dialogical. As such, this piece of writing is about suppressed thoughts and feelings that our collective picket line allows us to express. In order to maintain the open‐ended nature of the text, and perhaps also to retain some ‘dirtiness’ that is essential to writing, the article has not been language checked throughout by a native speaker of English.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors look at pre-service teachers' reflection processes and their breadth and depth in four different contexts and find that their former experiences as learners of mathematics seemed to have a great impact on their reflection when teaching mathematics for the first time.
Abstract: Reflective practice represents a central theme in teacher education. The focus of this study is to look at pre-service teachers’ reflection processes and their breadth and depth in four different contexts. Our research data consist of 53 pre-service teachers’ mathematics portfolios, from which three were selected for closer scrutiny. The chosen portfolios represent different reflection profiles. According to our findings, the breadth and the depth of the pre-service teachers’ reflection processes varied greatly, and their former experiences as learners of mathematics seemed to have a great impact on their reflection when teaching mathematics for the first time. However, through acquaintance with research articles, the pre-service teachers’ reflection deepened and, at the same time, seemed to broaden. The participants’ consideration of biographical contexts aided their understanding and their reflection of other contexts.

40 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, the cumulative effects of gas development, reindeer herding, and climate change on vegetation in the Yamal Peninsula in northwest Siberia have been investigated using a combination of ground-based and remote-sensing studies.
Abstract: The Yamal Peninsula in northwest Siberia is undergoing some of the most rapid land-cover and land-use changes in the Arctic due to a combination of gas development, reindeer herding, and climate change. Unusual geological condi- tions (nutrient-poor sands, massive ground ice and extensive landslides) exacerbate the impacts. These changes will likely increase markedly as transportation corridors are built to transport the gas to market. Understanding the nature, extent, causes and consequences (i.e., the cumulative effects) of the past and ongoing rapid changes on the Yamal is important for effective, long-term decision-making and planning. The cumulative effects to vegetation are the focus of this chapter because the plants are a critical component of the Yamal landscape that support the indigenous Nenets people and their reindeer and also protect the underlying ice-rich permafrost from melting. We are using a combination of ground-based studies (a transect of five loca- tions across the Yamal), remote-sensing studies, and analyses of Nenets land-use activities to develop vegetation-change models that can be used to help anticipate future states of the tundra and how those changes might affect traditional reindeer herding practices and the thermal state of the permafrost. This chapter provides an overview of the approach, some early results, and recommendations for expanding the concept of cumulative-effects analysis to include examining the simultaneous and interactive effects of multiple drivers of change.

40 citations


Authors

Showing all 710 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Hong Li10377942675
John C. Moore7638925542
Jeffrey M. Welker5717918135
Bruce C. Forbes431307984
Mats A. Granskog411415023
Manfred A. Lange38924256
Liisa Tyrväinen371126649
Samuli Helama351564008
Aslak Grinsted34899653
Jukka Jokimäki31934175
Sari Stark29582559
Elina Lahelma27862217
Jonna Häkkilä25972185
Rupert Gladstone23512320
Justus J. Randolph23662160
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Lancaster University
44.5K papers, 1.6M citations

81% related

University of Potsdam
26.7K papers, 759.7K citations

80% related

University of Jyväskylä
25.1K papers, 725K citations

79% related

Royal Holloway, University of London
20.9K papers, 851.2K citations

78% related

Aalto University
32.6K papers, 829.6K citations

78% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202318
202261
2021158
2020157
2019172
2018128