25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations

This paper proposes a retrospective of the changes in environmental policies and the various actors' positions and strategies concerning the Arctic since Mikhaïl Gorbachev, then the Soviet Union's General Secretary, visited Murmansk and gave a ceremonial speech in October 1987 – a speech t...

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Main Authors: FINGER-STICH, Andrea, FINGER, Matthias
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1814/25958
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spelling fteuinstitute:oai:cadmus.eui.eu:1814/25958 2023-05-15T14:20:52+02:00 25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations FINGER-STICH, Andrea FINGER, Matthias 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/1814/25958 en eng http://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2012/Finger_Stich_and_Finger.pdf http://www.arcticyearbook.com/book/ http://www.arcticyearbook.com/ Lassi HEININEN (ed.), The 2012 Arctic Yearbook, Rovaniemi, University of the Arctic, 2012, 194-222 2298–2418 http://hdl.handle.net/1814/25958 info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart 2012 fteuinstitute 2022-02-19T14:15:17Z This paper proposes a retrospective of the changes in environmental policies and the various actors' positions and strategies concerning the Arctic since Mikhaïl Gorbachev, then the Soviet Union's General Secretary, visited Murmansk and gave a ceremonial speech in October 1987 – a speech that triggered a new global outlook on the Arctic. The Arctic environment, 25 years ago, was perceived mainly as a Far North affected by distant modern civilization. Environmental concerns included Arctic haze, the depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer, the accumulation of pollutants in Arctic mammals, sea acidification, concentration of radioactive pollution, and hazards related to the presence of armament and military activities in the Arctic. But twenty-five years later, the Arctic has moved to the fore, experiencing environmental changes, mainly due to climate warming, firsthand and at double the rate of the world's average. With climate warming, paradoxically, the Arctic is not only a victim of change but has become a key actor in environmental change, with melting ice opening it up to intense fossil fuel and mineral resource exploitation. Who are the actors who will decide whether, to what extent and how these resources will be exploited? This article identifies the main periods and the main changes in the actors, their strategies and their power relations over the past 25 years in Arctic environmental agency. By doing so, it critically assesses these actors' constraints and potentials for mitigating and adapting to a rapidly warming climate. Book Part Arctic Arctic European University Institute, Italy: Cadmus (EUI Research Repository) Arctic Murmansk
institution Open Polar
collection European University Institute, Italy: Cadmus (EUI Research Repository)
op_collection_id fteuinstitute
language English
description This paper proposes a retrospective of the changes in environmental policies and the various actors' positions and strategies concerning the Arctic since Mikhaïl Gorbachev, then the Soviet Union's General Secretary, visited Murmansk and gave a ceremonial speech in October 1987 – a speech that triggered a new global outlook on the Arctic. The Arctic environment, 25 years ago, was perceived mainly as a Far North affected by distant modern civilization. Environmental concerns included Arctic haze, the depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer, the accumulation of pollutants in Arctic mammals, sea acidification, concentration of radioactive pollution, and hazards related to the presence of armament and military activities in the Arctic. But twenty-five years later, the Arctic has moved to the fore, experiencing environmental changes, mainly due to climate warming, firsthand and at double the rate of the world's average. With climate warming, paradoxically, the Arctic is not only a victim of change but has become a key actor in environmental change, with melting ice opening it up to intense fossil fuel and mineral resource exploitation. Who are the actors who will decide whether, to what extent and how these resources will be exploited? This article identifies the main periods and the main changes in the actors, their strategies and their power relations over the past 25 years in Arctic environmental agency. By doing so, it critically assesses these actors' constraints and potentials for mitigating and adapting to a rapidly warming climate.
format Book Part
author FINGER-STICH, Andrea
FINGER, Matthias
spellingShingle FINGER-STICH, Andrea
FINGER, Matthias
25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
author_facet FINGER-STICH, Andrea
FINGER, Matthias
author_sort FINGER-STICH, Andrea
title 25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
title_short 25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
title_full 25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
title_fullStr 25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
title_full_unstemmed 25 years of Arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
title_sort 25 years of arctic environmental agency : changing issues and power relations
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1814/25958
geographic Arctic
Murmansk
geographic_facet Arctic
Murmansk
genre Arctic
Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
op_relation http://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2012/Finger_Stich_and_Finger.pdf
http://www.arcticyearbook.com/book/
http://www.arcticyearbook.com/
Lassi HEININEN (ed.), The 2012 Arctic Yearbook, Rovaniemi, University of the Arctic, 2012, 194-222
2298–2418
http://hdl.handle.net/1814/25958
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