Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Sameradion

Sameradion
  • Giron, Sweden
Broadcast areaSápmi
Sweden
Programming
Language(s)Northern Sámi
Southern Sámi
Lule Sámi
Swedish
FormatNews, talk, music, entertainment, and sports
Ownership
OwnerSveriges Radio
History
First air date
1952
Links
WebsiteSameradion

Sameradion is the Sámi languages radio department of Swedish public service broadcaster Sveriges Radio (SR). Sameradion provides news, current affairs, cultural, sports, entertainment, and children’s programming for Sámi across Sweden.

Broadcast operations

Sameradion broadcasts weekdays (2h25m per day) and Sundays (2h15min) on FM and DAB via Sveriges Radio P2, along with 15-minute twice-weekly broadcasts on P4 Jämtland and around the clock online via SR Sápmi. SR Sápmi also carries Sámi music, youth radio, sports,[citation needed] and public events.[1] The channel broadcasts primarily in Northern Sámi, but also broadcasts regularly in Lule and Southern Sámi.

Ole Isak Mienna oversees Sameradion.

As part of SR, Sameradion and its sister television channel SVT Sápmi work with reporters and bureaus across Sweden, but it also shares reporting and programming with NRK Sápmi and Yle Sami Radio, the Sámi-focused public services in Norway and Finland respectively.[2] The station is based in Giron, Sweden, with bureaus in Arvidsjaur, Luleju, Umeå, and Stockholm, Sweden, as well as Guovdageaidnu and Kárášjohka, Norway.[1]

In contrast to NRK Sámi Radio, Sameradion does not have a standalone radio antenna station of its own, not even on the Luleå-Piteå DAB multiplex. It does however have a 24/7 internet radio station,[3] with the schedule mostly containing simulcasts with (and re-runs from) larger SR stations, imported shows from Norway, and music.

History

Sameradion traces its roots to the early-1950s, when SR began broadcasting programming targeting Sámi listeners, albeit in Swedish. In 1960, SR launched "Sámi Ságat," a Swedish-language program for Sámi hosted by Nils Hövenmark [sv]. In 1965, Sameradion began broadcasting regularly in Sámi languages.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "Sameradion och SVT Sápmi för Samefolket" [Sameradion and SVT Sápmi for Sámi People] (in Swedish). 30 April 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  2. ^ Alia, Valerie (2010). The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication. New York City, New York: Berghahn Books. pp. 134–135. ISBN 978-1-84545-420-3. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Tablå Sameradion & SVT Sápmi" (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  4. ^ "A way of gathering and reaching out". Samer. Retrieved 14 May 2020.