Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic

Traditionally the Arctic has been on the margins of international political interest, either geopolitically or environmentally. Climate change, though, has changed this by appearing to open up new economic opportunities in the region. Interest in the High North has subsequently increased, both from...

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Main Author: Hough, Peter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: SETA Foundation 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/
https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/1/Hotting%20Up_%20Geopolitical%20Rivalry%20and%20%20Environmental%20Security%20in%20the%20Arctic.pdf
https://www.insightturkey.com/commentary/hotting-up-geopolitical-rivalry-and-environmental-security-in-the-arctic
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spelling ftmiddlesex:oai:eprints.mdx.ac.uk:36474 2023-05-15T14:26:31+02:00 Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic Hough, Peter 2022-07-15 application/pdf https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/ https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/1/Hotting%20Up_%20Geopolitical%20Rivalry%20and%20%20Environmental%20Security%20in%20the%20Arctic.pdf https://www.insightturkey.com/commentary/hotting-up-geopolitical-rivalry-and-environmental-security-in-the-arctic unknown SETA Foundation https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/1/Hotting%20Up_%20Geopolitical%20Rivalry%20and%20%20Environmental%20Security%20in%20the%20Arctic.pdf Hough, Peter </view/creators/Hough=3APeter=3A=3A.html> ORCID logoorcid:0000-0002-1209-1654 (2022) Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic. Insight Turkey <https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/view/publications/Insight_Turkey.html>, 24 (2) . pp. 10-23. ISSN 1302-177X [Article] (doi:10.25253/99.2022242.1 <https://doi.org/10.25253/99.2022242.1>) Article PeerReviewed 2022 ftmiddlesex 2023-02-16T23:31:28Z Traditionally the Arctic has been on the margins of international political interest, either geopolitically or environmentally. Climate change, though, has changed this by appearing to open up new economic opportunities in the region. Interest in the High North has subsequently increased, both from the states of the region and beyond. To date, though, there has appeared no likelihood of this escalating into resource wars, despite this prospect being widely heralded a decade and a half ago. Instead, governance in the region, centered on the Arctic Council, has proved an exemplar of intergovernmental cooperation, even in the face of increased tensions between Russia and the West over the past two decades. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, though, has frozen this blossoming co-management of the High North and put its future in doubt. This is likely to have some negative consequences in terms of the environment and maritime safety in the region. However, despite a heightening of tensions,there remains little reason to expect a Russian military initiative in the region since all non-Russian territory will soon be under NATO protection and Moscow would have far more to lose than they could gain from such an act. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Council Arctic Climate change Middlesex University London: Research Repository Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Middlesex University London: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmiddlesex
language unknown
description Traditionally the Arctic has been on the margins of international political interest, either geopolitically or environmentally. Climate change, though, has changed this by appearing to open up new economic opportunities in the region. Interest in the High North has subsequently increased, both from the states of the region and beyond. To date, though, there has appeared no likelihood of this escalating into resource wars, despite this prospect being widely heralded a decade and a half ago. Instead, governance in the region, centered on the Arctic Council, has proved an exemplar of intergovernmental cooperation, even in the face of increased tensions between Russia and the West over the past two decades. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, though, has frozen this blossoming co-management of the High North and put its future in doubt. This is likely to have some negative consequences in terms of the environment and maritime safety in the region. However, despite a heightening of tensions,there remains little reason to expect a Russian military initiative in the region since all non-Russian territory will soon be under NATO protection and Moscow would have far more to lose than they could gain from such an act.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hough, Peter
spellingShingle Hough, Peter
Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic
author_facet Hough, Peter
author_sort Hough, Peter
title Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic
title_short Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic
title_full Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic
title_fullStr Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic
title_sort hotting up? geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the arctic
publisher SETA Foundation
publishDate 2022
url https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/
https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/1/Hotting%20Up_%20Geopolitical%20Rivalry%20and%20%20Environmental%20Security%20in%20the%20Arctic.pdf
https://www.insightturkey.com/commentary/hotting-up-geopolitical-rivalry-and-environmental-security-in-the-arctic
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic Council
Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Council
Arctic
Climate change
op_relation https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/36474/1/Hotting%20Up_%20Geopolitical%20Rivalry%20and%20%20Environmental%20Security%20in%20the%20Arctic.pdf
Hough, Peter </view/creators/Hough=3APeter=3A=3A.html> ORCID logoorcid:0000-0002-1209-1654 (2022) Hotting up? Geopolitical rivalry and environmental security in the Arctic. Insight Turkey <https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/view/publications/Insight_Turkey.html>, 24 (2) . pp. 10-23. ISSN 1302-177X [Article] (doi:10.25253/99.2022242.1 <https://doi.org/10.25253/99.2022242.1>)
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