Arctic Policies and Strategies:Analysis, Synthesis, and Trends

The scientific report “Arctic Policies and Strategies – Analysis, Synthesis and Trends” delivers a holistic analysis of existing policies, strategies, and declarations of the relevant Arctic stakeholders. It also includes new and/or emerging trends of Arctic governance and geopolitics in the early 2...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heininen, Lassi, Everett, Karen, Padrtova, Barbora, Reissel, Anni
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/bc17b8f8-2299-4fe5-8653-a41bf19816f2
https://doi.org/10.22022/AFI/11-2019.16175
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Summary:The scientific report “Arctic Policies and Strategies – Analysis, Synthesis and Trends” delivers a holistic analysis of existing policies, strategies, and declarations of the relevant Arctic stakeholders. It also includes new and/or emerging trends of Arctic governance and geopolitics in the early 21st century. The analysis, using quantitative and qualitative methods, is based on coding the text of 56 policy documents (in 1996-2019): the strategies and policies of the Arctic States the Arctic Council Observer states; the policies and declarations of the Arctic Indigenous peoples’ organizations (Permanent Participants); and the relevant Arctic Council chairmanship programs and ministerial declarations. It considers how different relevant Arctic actors define and address issues around the following: the human dimension, governance, international cooperation, environmental protection, pollution, climate change, security, safety, economy, tourism, infrastructure, and science & education. Each document was carefully read, the quotes were coded, and used to compare and contrast (percentage-wise) how the different documents address these issues. For each category of stakeholder, the findings are: compared within the category, and discussed with each other category-wise. According to our study, the most-coded quotes of the Arctic States’ policy documents relate to the Governance, Economy, International Cooperation, and Human Dimension indicators, as well as the new Environmental Protection one (when connected to Pollution and Climate Change). The policy documents of the four Indigenous peoples’ organizations explicitly address issues broadly surrounding Indigenous rights, although in different contexts, and those of the Governance indicator both broadly and in detail. Unsurprisingly, all the documents emphasize the importance of ‘Traditional knowledge’. The most-quoted indicator in the Arctic policies/strategies of the nine Observer states is the Science and Education, followed by the International Cooperation and ...