Norwegianization was the longtime policy of the government from around 1880 to 1960 with the intention of assimilating the Sámi into the dominant society. While the change in status in the Constitution is welcome and necessary, there are those in Norway who are still ambivalent about the use of the word Indigenous or urfolk (original people) for the Sámi.
Someone I know in Norway who is currently reading my latest book From Lapland to Sápmi, wrote me to say they were enjoying it. They added something to the effect that the Sámi were not actually Indigenous, since they arrived in Scandinavia after people were already living there: “So they are not an aboriginal people as such.”
I don’t know all the ins and outs of the debates about “who came first,” and I have consciously stayed out of discussions on this topic. I do know, however, that the debate about who are the first inhabitants of Sápmi, although sometimes framed in a scientific way and buttressed by DNA data and other evidence, has been and is still employed by the dominant population in Scandinavia to prove that the Sámi claims to territory and natural resources are bogus and self-serving.
The period of Sámi history I’m most familiar with is the late 19th century and the 20th century, a time connected with “Lappology” and Racial Biology, but also a time of growing Sámi political resistance and cultural renaissance. During the last half of the 20th century the term “Indigenous” was first claimed by certain Sámi groups as a means of finding connection with and support from other Indigenous people around the globe. This term spread in Sámi society and, although initially resisted by individuals and governments in the Nordic countries, it gradually was adopted in its basic outlines and is now generally accepted. The Sámi were politically recognized as an Indigenous group in Norway in 1987 with the Sámi Act, and again in 1990 when Norway signed the UN’s ILO Convention No. 169 concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries.