UrbTrans Urban Transformation in a Warming Arctic

Duration:
31.08.2020–31.03.2025

UrbTrans is an interdisciplinary project that examines the development of Nuuk, the capital city of Kalaallit Nunaat (Greenland), from 1950 and up until today. The aim with the project is to learn with and from Nuuk about the connections between urbanization, colonialism and decolonization.

Contact persons

  • Tone Huse
    Tone Huse Associate Professor Principal Investigator

UrbTrans is interested in how Nuuk, the capital city of Kalaallit Nuunat, has been planned and developed since the 1950s and up until today. It looks at the tools, procedures and government agencies involved in building and shaping Nuuk, and how this has changed with the shifts to Home Rule (1979) and Self Rule (2009). A major part of the project is therefore to study historical and archival materials. Equally important, however, is to understand how Nuuk’s development has been experienced, reflected upon and acted towards by its people. Conversations, stories, art, and culture can help us to understand both the changes and the everyday life of the city. Through this we hope to gain a better understanding of the connections between colonialism and urbanisation in Kalaallit Nunaat, as well as the role played by Nuuk in its decolonisation. More broadly we think this can contribute to a better understanding of what Nordic colonialism in the Arctic has been, and to a stronger awareness within the Arctic and the Nordic countries about how the past is shaping both the present and the shared futures of the Arctic region.

UrbTrans is based at UiT The Arctic University of Norway and conducted in cooperation with partners at Ilisimatusarfik (University of Greenland), Greenland National Museum & Archives, and Nuuk Local Museum. Through this we hope to build new and stronger bonds for collaboration between the cities of Romsa/Tromsø and Nuuk, and to conduct our research in ways that are both sensitive to and can benefit Nuuk’s community.

UrbTrans is funded by the Tromsø Research Foundation and the Research Council Norway. Our research ethics are guided by the principles laid down by the Inuit Circumpolar Council for Ethical and Equitable Engagement and the CARE principles for data management.

Participants

Funding

Funded by The Research Council of Norway

Prosjektnummer: 100759

Collaborators

UiT The Arctic University of Norway (project owner)

University of Oslo 

Ilisimatusarfik (University of Greenland)

Greenland National Museum & Archives

Nuuk Local Museum

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Published Apr. 8, 2024 4:33 PM - Last modified May 6, 2024 10:52 AM