This article examines reconciliation in Norway, asking how the Norwegian state’s approach to reconciliation exemplifies what I call the logic of culturalization. I theorize culturalization as a settler-colonial logic of governance that neutralizes Sámi political claims to jurisdiction and decision-making by recasting them as matters of culture. Empirically, the article analyzes two parallel developments in Norway in 2023: the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s final report and the protests in Oslo following the Supreme Court’s Fosen decision, led by Sámi youth. The seemingly divergent processes – reconciliation on the one hand and the government response to Sámi-led demonstrations on the other – are not oppositional but mutually reinforcing expressions of the same settler-colonial governance logic, operating through the mechanisms of distraction, delay, and decoy. Specifically, I argue that decoy politics operates through three interrelated mechanisms: reframing legal and distributive claims as negotiable rather than binding, converting political legitimacy into symbolic inclusion and cultural recognition, and deferring substantive land and jurisdictional claims through procedural delay.
Rauna Kuokkanen (Mon,) studied this question.