A Legal Conquest of the Arctic? China, the European Nordic Countries and Multilateralism

China published its first White Paper on the Arctic region in 2018, announcing its vision of integrating it as a Polar Silk Road under its Belt and Road Initiative framework. This marked the beginning of an increasingly assertive Chinese presence in the Arctic and indicated that the region has gaine...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Global Europe – Basel Papers on Europe in a Global Perspective
Main Author: Morell, Selina
Format: Text
Language:German
Published: Global Europe – Basel Papers on Europe in a Global Perspective; Global Europe – Basel Papers on Europe in a Global Perspective 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.24437/global_europe.v0i119.191
https://eterna.unibas.ch/index.php/global_europe/article/view/191
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Summary:China published its first White Paper on the Arctic region in 2018, announcing its vision of integrating it as a Polar Silk Road under its Belt and Road Initiative framework. This marked the beginning of an increasingly assertive Chinese presence in the Arctic and indicated that the region has gained strategic significance in Beijing’s foreign policy agenda. This master’s thesis examined whether the inclusion of the Arctic in the framework of China’s Belt and Road Initiative has influenced the Chinese foreign policy approach towards the Arctic countries. If the inclusion of the Arctic did indeed have an impact, this could help to assess the overall influence of the Belt and Road Initiative on China’s foreign policy and gain a better understanding of how China operates in its context.