Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council

Successful collaboration between the indigenous peoples and the sovereign states of Arctic North America has helped to stabilise the Arctic region, fostering meaningful indigenous participation in the governance of their homeland, the introduction of new institutions of self-governance at the munici...

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Published in:The Yearbook of Polar Law Online
Main Author: Zellen, Barry S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Brill 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116427_012010016
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spelling crbrillap:10.1163/22116427_012010016 2023-05-15T14:30:42+02:00 Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council Zellen, Barry S. 2020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116427_012010016 https://brill.com/view/journals/yplo/12/1/article-p251_16.xml https://brill.com/downloadpdf/journals/yplo/12/1/article-p251_16.xml unknown Brill The Yearbook of Polar Law Online volume 12, issue 1, page 251-267 ISSN 2211-6427 journal-article 2020 crbrillap https://doi.org/10.1163/22116427_012010016 2022-12-11T12:47:53Z Successful collaboration between the indigenous peoples and the sovereign states of Arctic North America has helped to stabilise the Arctic region, fostering meaningful indigenous participation in the governance of their homeland, the introduction of new institutions of self-governance at the municipal, tribal and territorial levels, and successful diplomatic collaborations at the international level through the Arctic Council. This stability and the reciprocal and increasingly balanced relationship between sovereign states and indigenous stakeholders has yielded a widely recognised spirit of international collaboration often referred to as Arctic exceptionalism. With competition in the Arctic between states on the rise, the multitude of co-management systems and the multi-level, inter-governmental and inter-organisational relationships they have nurtured across the region will help to neutralise new threats to ‘Arctic Exceptionalism’ posed by intensifying inter-state tensions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Council Arctic Yearbook of Polar Law Brill (via Crossref) Arctic The Yearbook of Polar Law Online 12 1 251 267
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description Successful collaboration between the indigenous peoples and the sovereign states of Arctic North America has helped to stabilise the Arctic region, fostering meaningful indigenous participation in the governance of their homeland, the introduction of new institutions of self-governance at the municipal, tribal and territorial levels, and successful diplomatic collaborations at the international level through the Arctic Council. This stability and the reciprocal and increasingly balanced relationship between sovereign states and indigenous stakeholders has yielded a widely recognised spirit of international collaboration often referred to as Arctic exceptionalism. With competition in the Arctic between states on the rise, the multitude of co-management systems and the multi-level, inter-governmental and inter-organisational relationships they have nurtured across the region will help to neutralise new threats to ‘Arctic Exceptionalism’ posed by intensifying inter-state tensions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Zellen, Barry S.
spellingShingle Zellen, Barry S.
Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
author_facet Zellen, Barry S.
author_sort Zellen, Barry S.
title Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
title_short Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
title_full Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
title_fullStr Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
title_full_unstemmed Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
title_sort global co-management and the emergent arctic: opportunities for engagement and collaboration between arctic states, indigenous permanent participants, and observers on the arctic council
publisher Brill
publishDate 2020
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116427_012010016
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volume 12, issue 1, page 251-267
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