1. High Arctic Stability as an Asset for Storms of International Politics: An Introduction / Lassi Heininen -- 2. Security of the Global Arctic in Transformation: Potential for changes in problem definition / Lassi Heininen -- 3. Military Cooperation and Enhanced Arctic Security in the Context of Climate Change and Growing Global Interest in the Arctic / Michal Luszczuk -- 4. Russian Sub-national Actors: Paradiplomacies in the European and Russian Arctic / Pertti Joenniemi and Alexander Sergunin -- 5. The US Arctic Policy Agenda: The State Trumps Other Interests / Steve L. Lamy -- 6. Ripple Effects: Devolution, Development and State Sovereignty in the Canadian North / Heather N. Nicol -- 7. The Arctic, Laboratory of the Anthropocene / Matthias Finger.
Summary:
"The post-Cold War Arctic has seen a transformation from military tension and a focus on national security to a concern for environmental and human security. As a result of this, the globalized Arctic has a high level of peace and stability, maintained by international cooperation between the Arctic states, northern indigenous peoples, sub-national governments and local actors. There has also been a shift from environmental protection to economic activities and, consequently, states easily trump other interests. Now, in the Arctic, these challenges require fresh thinking on a local and global scale. Regional wars, the 'war on terror', and economic crises have posed new threats to Northern security order."-- Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.