Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?

This collaboration of Kruse, University of Alaska, Anchorage (0638408, LEAD) and Hamilton, University of New Hampshire (0638413) is part of the Arctic Observation Network (AON), initiated as part of the International Polar Year, and will implement phase one human dimension priorities of the Study of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jack Kruse
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2009
Subjects:
AON
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DZ03323
id dataone:doi:10.18739/A2DZ03323
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spelling dataone:doi:10.18739/A2DZ03323 2024-06-03T18:46:33+00:00 Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State? Jack Kruse No geographic description provided. ENVELOPE(-171.701,169.0,71.0,50.0) BEGINDATE: 2007-06-29T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2009-05-29T00:00:00Z 2009-11-18T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DZ03323 unknown Arctic Data Center AON Dataset 2009 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DZ03323 2024-06-03T18:18:20Z This collaboration of Kruse, University of Alaska, Anchorage (0638408, LEAD) and Hamilton, University of New Hampshire (0638413) is part of the Arctic Observation Network (AON), initiated as part of the International Polar Year, and will implement phase one human dimension priorities of the Study of Arctic Environmental Change (SEARCH) program. This Human Dimension Observation System is designed to become part of a network of measurement systems developed within SEARCH. The goal of the researchers is to understand how socio-economic systems respond to rapid environmental change, and how local response interacts with broad forces of development and government policies to affect the well-being of Arctic residents. They will integrate existing data for key variables identified by the Committee: population size and structure, births, deaths, migration, health measures, cultural diversity, education, and economic indicators, including employment, subsistence, and government structure. For this study, they have identified stakeholder groups in each of the "arenas of climate-human interaction" (i.e., marine mammal hunting, fisheries, resource development) and have formed an advisory group made up of representatives of the following indigenous organizations: RAIPON, Inuvialuit Regional Corporation, Saami Council, Maniilaq, North Slope Borough, Makivik Corp., and the Labrador Inuit Association. The project will focus on four arenas likely to involve climate-human interactions: marine mammal hunting; oil, gas, and mineral development; tourism; and fisheries. A fifth project focus is on indicators of social outcomes of human interactions with environmental change. As part of AON, the project is designed to foster integrated analysis across the physical, natural, and social sciences. Dataset Arctic International Polar Year inuit Inuvialuit north slope saami Alaska Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Anchorage Arctic ENVELOPE(-171.701,169.0,71.0,50.0)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic AON
spellingShingle AON
Jack Kruse
Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?
topic_facet AON
description This collaboration of Kruse, University of Alaska, Anchorage (0638408, LEAD) and Hamilton, University of New Hampshire (0638413) is part of the Arctic Observation Network (AON), initiated as part of the International Polar Year, and will implement phase one human dimension priorities of the Study of Arctic Environmental Change (SEARCH) program. This Human Dimension Observation System is designed to become part of a network of measurement systems developed within SEARCH. The goal of the researchers is to understand how socio-economic systems respond to rapid environmental change, and how local response interacts with broad forces of development and government policies to affect the well-being of Arctic residents. They will integrate existing data for key variables identified by the Committee: population size and structure, births, deaths, migration, health measures, cultural diversity, education, and economic indicators, including employment, subsistence, and government structure. For this study, they have identified stakeholder groups in each of the "arenas of climate-human interaction" (i.e., marine mammal hunting, fisheries, resource development) and have formed an advisory group made up of representatives of the following indigenous organizations: RAIPON, Inuvialuit Regional Corporation, Saami Council, Maniilaq, North Slope Borough, Makivik Corp., and the Labrador Inuit Association. The project will focus on four arenas likely to involve climate-human interactions: marine mammal hunting; oil, gas, and mineral development; tourism; and fisheries. A fifth project focus is on indicators of social outcomes of human interactions with environmental change. As part of AON, the project is designed to foster integrated analysis across the physical, natural, and social sciences.
format Dataset
author Jack Kruse
author_facet Jack Kruse
author_sort Jack Kruse
title Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?
title_short Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?
title_full Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?
title_fullStr Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?
title_full_unstemmed Is the Arctic Human Environment Moving to a New State?
title_sort is the arctic human environment moving to a new state?
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2009
url https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DZ03323
op_coverage No geographic description provided.
ENVELOPE(-171.701,169.0,71.0,50.0)
BEGINDATE: 2007-06-29T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2009-05-29T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-171.701,169.0,71.0,50.0)
geographic Anchorage
Arctic
geographic_facet Anchorage
Arctic
genre Arctic
International Polar Year
inuit
Inuvialuit
north slope
saami
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
International Polar Year
inuit
Inuvialuit
north slope
saami
Alaska
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DZ03323
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