2020 in the High Arctic (original) (raw)

The Arctic at the Beginning of the 21st Century, M. Łuszczuk (ed.) - SUMMARY

2013

This is the first Polish book to examine the international relations in the Arctic region from a truly multidimensional perspective. This volume (pp. 586) brings together almost 30 Polish most seasoned Arctic experts mainly from many universities in Poland to analyse how Arctic and non-Arctic nations, and organizations, and indigenous peoples are adapting their attitudes to accommodate increased human activities, like shipping or energy and mineral developments in this polar region. The main scientific objectives of this book are to investigate the multidimensional background and multifaceted essence of the processes and developments in terms of cooperation and rivalry taking place in the Arctic region in the first decade of the 21st century and to evaluate their importance for further development of the international relations on the regional and global scale. It is hoped that this distinctive collection of original contributions by leading Polish specialists will provide the starting point for future development of the Arctic research in social sciences in Poland and will offer a valuable basis for more active participation of Polish researchers and scholars in international debate about the Arctic. This book is also edited with an intention to facilitate scientific synergy and to advance interdisciplinary dialogue among all members of the Polish polar research community.

Shaping Tomorrow’s Arctic

Sustainability

This Special Issue “Shaping Tomorrow’s Arctic” explores the past, present and future of Arctic sustainability [...]

ARCTIC HORIZONS -FINAL REPORT

Arctic Horizons was a six-institution, NSF-funded project to set agendas and priorities for the next 10-20 years of United States federal spending on Arctic social sciences. In 2016-17, Arctic Horizons brought together more than 300 social scientists, Indigenous community members, and policy makers from the United States, Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Denmark, Finland, and Russia in direct, face-to-face meetings – including five major workshops at locations across the United States and smaller workshops and town hall meetings at conferences – to assess the current state of research and funding across the North, for most of the disciplines in the social sciences, to identify enduring and emergent problems and research areas, and to identify priorities for Arctic social sciences research by U.S. funding agencies in the coming decades.

Toward a Post-Arctic World

2009

The period between the Cold War’s end, and the current period of rapid climate change, was a quiet period in the field of Arctic security studies—inter-state tensions across the Arctic basin dramatically shrunk after the Soviet collapse, and concerns over external Arctic security shifted to the back burner during most of the 90s. During this period, another dimension of Arctic security accelerated to the front burner—the internal dimension—as a tremendous transformation came to fruition, integrating the largely indigenous Arctic into the constitutional and economic framework of the modern state.