Abstract

Simple SummaryChronic wasting disease (CWD), the most transmissible of the prion diseases, was detected in 2016 in Norway in a wild reindeer. This is the first case in Europe, an unexpected one. This paper focuses on the issues that the arrival of CWD raises in Northern Europe, especially regarding the Indigenous Sami reindeer husbandry in Sweden. The study offers a diagnosis of the situation regarding the management of the disease and its risks. We present the importance of the involvement of the Sami people in the surveillance program in order to understand better the diseases and the reindeer populations, movement, and behavior. However, the implementation of new European health standards in the Sami reindeer herding could have tremendous consequences on the evolution of this ancestral activity and the relationship between herders and reindeer.Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the most transmissible of the prion diseases. In 2016, an unexpected case was found in Norway, the first in Europe. Since then, there have been 32 confirmed cases in Norway, Sweden, and Finland. This paper aims to examine the situation from a social and political perspective: considering the management of CWD in the Swedish part of Sápmi—the Sami ancestral land; identifying the place of the Sami people in the risk management–because of the threats to Sami reindeer herding that CWD presents; and understanding how the disease can modify the modalities of Indigenous reindeer husbandry, whether or not CWD is epizootic. Based on interviews with various stakeholders and by examining the social sciences literature, this paper shows that the health risk management is structured by a politico-scientific controversy about the recognition, or not, of atypical and classical CWD. The Sami herders are currently cooperating with the state authorities in the surveillance program to sample their herds. This involvement takes place in a situation where the balance of power between the Sami people and the state, or the European Union, is framed by its colonial context. This has consequences with respect to the definition of a common interest and to implementing sanitary measures. The particular features of reindeer herding are seen as a challenge to managing CWD risk, compared with European health standards. We argue that CWD will greatly modify the modalities of Indigenous reindeer herding, whether there are positive cases or not in the Sami reindeer. By implementing new health guidelines, the authorities will create a cascading effect in Sami land and its use. The CWD situation in Fennoscandia is full of uncertainty but may cause a major shift in the organization and the governance of Sápmi. In September 2020, the identification of a new CWD case in a wild reindeer in Norway started a new episode in the disease management in Fennoscandia. Our paper raises various questions linked to understanding this new step in this crisis which is not only epidemiological, but also socio-cultural and political.

Highlights

  • Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the most transmissible of the prion diseases [1,2]

  • In 2016, an unexpected case was found in Norway, the first in Europe, and a further 28 positive cases have been found in Norway, Sweden, and Finland since including a new case in a second population of wild reindeer in Norway in September 2020 [9]

  • We examined several topics: the discovery of CWD in Northern Europe; the strategy of the authorities for managing this situation; the tools used for management; the culling strategy; the role of the Sami herders in the management; the possibility and consequences of there being cases in reindeer husbandry; Sami knowledge and values related to dealing with epizootics in their activities; and the evolution of the situation in the future

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the most transmissible of the prion diseases [1,2]. It affects cervids (Cervidae) in captivity or in the wild, a rather uncommon situation among prion diseases [3]. CWD has mostly been investigated and understood through a biological and epidemiological approach, with less social and even less political consideration This might be explained by the facts that it affects remote areas and because the position of cervids in the international market is low [3]. In Fennoscandia 500,000 reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus) are herded by Indigenous Sami people

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