Arctic governance
Power in cross-border cooperation
Abstract
This book seeks to pose and explore a question that sheds light on the contested but largely cooperative nature of Arctic governance in the post-Cold War period: how does power matter – and how has it mattered – in shaping cross-border cooperation and diplomacy in the Arctic? Each chapter functions as a window through which power relations in the Arctic are explored. Issues include how representing the Arctic region matters for securing preferred outcomes, how circumpolar cooperation is marked by regional hierarchies and how Arctic governance has become a global social site in its own right, replete with disciplining norms for steering diplomatic behaviour. This book draws upon Russia’s role in the Arctic Council as an extended case study and examines how Arctic cross-border governance can be understood as a site of competition over the exercise of authority.
Keywords
russia; governance; power; expert knowledge; indigenous diplomacy; arctic; environmental cooperation; international relations; political geography; arctic council; Norway; Soviet UnionDOI
10.7765/9781526131645ISBN
9781526131645OCN
1052106253Publisher
Manchester University PressPublisher website
https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
2018Classification
Society and Social Sciences
Politics and government
Comparative politics