The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region

Making predictions in a highly uncertain environment is always a hazardous enterprise. Confronted with global warming, the future of the Arctic region has been often debated, both in terms of the scope and the speed of expected changes, including the future of resource development, the opening of sh...

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Main Authors: Landriault, Mathieu, Rowe, Elana Tovah Wilson, Minard, Paul
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: NAASDN Policy Primer 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3131345
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spelling ftnupi:oai:nupi.brage.unit.no:11250/3131345 2024-06-23T07:48:08+00:00 The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region Landriault, Mathieu Rowe, Elana Tovah Wilson Minard, Paul 2024-05-24T11:02:23Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3131345 eng eng NAASDN Policy Primer https://www.naadsn.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/24apr-arctic-barometer-primer-ML-EWR-PM.pdf Utenriksdepartementet: Arctic Pressures Project https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3131345 cristin:2268691 9 Research report 2024 ftnupi 2024-05-27T23:32:25Z Making predictions in a highly uncertain environment is always a hazardous enterprise. Confronted with global warming, the future of the Arctic region has been often debated, both in terms of the scope and the speed of expected changes, including the future of resource development, the opening of shipping routes, and the evolution of multilateral fora. These predictions have come from different sources: governments through different policy papers and statements, the media, civil society, and academics, to name but a few. It can be difficult to account for this vast and diverse array of predictions, considering that each actor has interests to promote. We decided to develop a survey asking different actors to make predictions about possible Arctic geopolitical developments. Instead of letting individuals make their own predictions on the topic of their choice, we selected plausible scenarios and prompted respondents to evaluate if these developments were likely or unlikely to happen. Scenarios were developed to be both visible and concrete: we can evaluate if the scenario unfolded or not during a certain time period. For example, we can observe if Russia violated the airspace of another Arctic state, if Greenland reached state sovereignty, or if the U.S. deployed a freedom of navigation operations in the Arctic region. In total, our scenarios covered two dimensions: governance and security. On governance, potential developments around diplomatic initiatives or multilateral cooperation were tested. On security, the possibility of military conflict in the region or of military intrusions were considered. Two main objectives justified this approach. First, we wanted to evaluate if experts were correct in their predictions. Related to this, we were curious to know which type of issues caused incorrect assessments. Second, we repeated the same scenarios in multiple waves: the objective was to analyze if specific geopolitical developments occurring between waves would change predictions, moving the needle on experts’ ... Report Arctic Arctic Global warming Greenland Norwegian Institute of international affairs: NUPI Research Online (Brage) Arctic Greenland The Needle ENVELOPE(-64.047,-64.047,63.267,63.267)
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description Making predictions in a highly uncertain environment is always a hazardous enterprise. Confronted with global warming, the future of the Arctic region has been often debated, both in terms of the scope and the speed of expected changes, including the future of resource development, the opening of shipping routes, and the evolution of multilateral fora. These predictions have come from different sources: governments through different policy papers and statements, the media, civil society, and academics, to name but a few. It can be difficult to account for this vast and diverse array of predictions, considering that each actor has interests to promote. We decided to develop a survey asking different actors to make predictions about possible Arctic geopolitical developments. Instead of letting individuals make their own predictions on the topic of their choice, we selected plausible scenarios and prompted respondents to evaluate if these developments were likely or unlikely to happen. Scenarios were developed to be both visible and concrete: we can evaluate if the scenario unfolded or not during a certain time period. For example, we can observe if Russia violated the airspace of another Arctic state, if Greenland reached state sovereignty, or if the U.S. deployed a freedom of navigation operations in the Arctic region. In total, our scenarios covered two dimensions: governance and security. On governance, potential developments around diplomatic initiatives or multilateral cooperation were tested. On security, the possibility of military conflict in the region or of military intrusions were considered. Two main objectives justified this approach. First, we wanted to evaluate if experts were correct in their predictions. Related to this, we were curious to know which type of issues caused incorrect assessments. Second, we repeated the same scenarios in multiple waves: the objective was to analyze if specific geopolitical developments occurring between waves would change predictions, moving the needle on experts’ ...
format Report
author Landriault, Mathieu
Rowe, Elana Tovah Wilson
Minard, Paul
spellingShingle Landriault, Mathieu
Rowe, Elana Tovah Wilson
Minard, Paul
The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region
author_facet Landriault, Mathieu
Rowe, Elana Tovah Wilson
Minard, Paul
author_sort Landriault, Mathieu
title The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region
title_short The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region
title_full The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region
title_fullStr The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region
title_full_unstemmed The Arctic Barometer: Measuring Expert Predictions on the Arctic Region
title_sort arctic barometer: measuring expert predictions on the arctic region
publisher NAASDN Policy Primer
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3131345
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.047,-64.047,63.267,63.267)
geographic Arctic
Greenland
The Needle
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
The Needle
genre Arctic
Arctic
Global warming
Greenland
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Global warming
Greenland
op_source 9
op_relation https://www.naadsn.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/24apr-arctic-barometer-primer-ML-EWR-PM.pdf
Utenriksdepartementet: Arctic Pressures Project
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3131345
cristin:2268691
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