Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness

© 2014 Taylor & Francis.At a time when the Arctic is attracting increasing international attention and a variety of actors are positioning themselves in anticipation of future developments, news reporters across the world face the challenge of explaining why the Arctic is relevant to the lives a...

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Main Authors: Steinberg, PE, Bruun, JM, Medby, IA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1526451/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1526451 2023-05-15T14:30:44+02:00 Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness Steinberg, PE Bruun, JM Medby, IA 2014-10-02 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1526451/ unknown Polar Geography , 37 (4) pp. 273-297. (2014) Article 2014 ftucl 2017-02-09T23:14:51Z © 2014 Taylor & Francis.At a time when the Arctic is attracting increasing international attention and a variety of actors are positioning themselves in anticipation of future developments, news reporters across the world face the challenge of explaining why the Arctic is relevant to the lives and realities of audiences, some of whom are far from the region itself. This challenge was felt particularly profoundly in May 2013, when events and controversies surrounding the Kiruna Arctic Council meeting tasked journalists around the world with explaining to their audiences what it means to have a legitimate interest in the Arctic and why the Arctic matters on a global scale. Media coverage from the eight Arctic Council member states, six candidate states, and six existing permanent observer states thus presented a natural experiment in Arctic awareness. In this article, an analysis of 280 news stories reporting on the Kiruna meeting is used to reveal how the media frame the Arctic as a region of increasing global significance – a region in which present-day participation is a strategic positioning for the future, and in which political presence holds symbolic significance for geopolitical relations far beyond the region's latitudinal borders. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Council Arctic Kiruna Polar Geography University College London: UCL Discovery Arctic Kiruna
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
description © 2014 Taylor & Francis.At a time when the Arctic is attracting increasing international attention and a variety of actors are positioning themselves in anticipation of future developments, news reporters across the world face the challenge of explaining why the Arctic is relevant to the lives and realities of audiences, some of whom are far from the region itself. This challenge was felt particularly profoundly in May 2013, when events and controversies surrounding the Kiruna Arctic Council meeting tasked journalists around the world with explaining to their audiences what it means to have a legitimate interest in the Arctic and why the Arctic matters on a global scale. Media coverage from the eight Arctic Council member states, six candidate states, and six existing permanent observer states thus presented a natural experiment in Arctic awareness. In this article, an analysis of 280 news stories reporting on the Kiruna meeting is used to reveal how the media frame the Arctic as a region of increasing global significance – a region in which present-day participation is a strategic positioning for the future, and in which political presence holds symbolic significance for geopolitical relations far beyond the region's latitudinal borders.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Steinberg, PE
Bruun, JM
Medby, IA
spellingShingle Steinberg, PE
Bruun, JM
Medby, IA
Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness
author_facet Steinberg, PE
Bruun, JM
Medby, IA
author_sort Steinberg, PE
title Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness
title_short Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness
title_full Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness
title_fullStr Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness
title_full_unstemmed Covering Kiruna: a natural experiment in Arctic awareness
title_sort covering kiruna: a natural experiment in arctic awareness
publishDate 2014
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1526451/
geographic Arctic
Kiruna
geographic_facet Arctic
Kiruna
genre Arctic Council
Arctic
Kiruna
Polar Geography
genre_facet Arctic Council
Arctic
Kiruna
Polar Geography
op_source Polar Geography , 37 (4) pp. 273-297. (2014)
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