"On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council

The thesis investigates the institutional approach" to sustainable development in the Arctic Council. What has been called the institutional approach is conceived of along two dimensions 1. The institutional dimension; and, 2. The ideational dimension. This means that both institutional arrange...

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Main Author: Mevatne, Martine
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universitetet i Bergen (UiB) 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/15805
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spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/15805 2023-05-15T14:30:36+02:00 "On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council Mevatne, Martine 2017-05-11T12:06:43Z 1347849 bytes application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1956/15805 eng eng Universitetet i Bergen (UiB) https://hdl.handle.net/1956/15805 Copyright the author. All rights reserved. 731114 Master thesis 2017 ftunivbergen 2023-03-14T17:43:16Z The thesis investigates the institutional approach" to sustainable development in the Arctic Council. What has been called the institutional approach is conceived of along two dimensions 1. The institutional dimension; and, 2. The ideational dimension. This means that both institutional arrangement around the thematic area, and the substance of sustainable development as an idea has been analysed. This corresponds to the dimensions in discursive institutionalism. The dimensions of the policy arrangement approach have structured the empirical investigation: political modernisation, rules of the game, actors and discourse coalitions, power and influence, and discourse and policy programmes. The data material consists of documents from the Arctic Council online document archive, as well as secondary sources. The thesis finds that the Arctic Council has strongly contributed to region building and facilitating a cooperative environment for Arctic governance. The development of a clear strategy on sustainable development is more challenging. Much like the concept of sustainable development itself, its interpretation in the Arctic Council can be said to maximise consensus rather than clarity. This challenge is further amplified by the separation of sustainable development and environmental protection as two founding pillars of the Council. The Arctic Council has generated large amounts of scientific research and assessments, and identified important gaps in knowledge. It has not gone as far in outlining consequences for policy, long-term strategies and policy recommendations. Sustainable development as an idea in the Arctic Council takes a similar form as the mainstream Brundtland definition, with an added focus on culture, health and indigenous issues. In relation to climate change, the focus is almost exclusively on adaption, which can serve to shift the discussion away from connections between the dimensions of sustainable development. In a changing Arctic where actors are unsure of the future and their interests in ... Master Thesis Arctic Council Arctic Climate change University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
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topic 731114
spellingShingle 731114
Mevatne, Martine
"On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council
topic_facet 731114
description The thesis investigates the institutional approach" to sustainable development in the Arctic Council. What has been called the institutional approach is conceived of along two dimensions 1. The institutional dimension; and, 2. The ideational dimension. This means that both institutional arrangement around the thematic area, and the substance of sustainable development as an idea has been analysed. This corresponds to the dimensions in discursive institutionalism. The dimensions of the policy arrangement approach have structured the empirical investigation: political modernisation, rules of the game, actors and discourse coalitions, power and influence, and discourse and policy programmes. The data material consists of documents from the Arctic Council online document archive, as well as secondary sources. The thesis finds that the Arctic Council has strongly contributed to region building and facilitating a cooperative environment for Arctic governance. The development of a clear strategy on sustainable development is more challenging. Much like the concept of sustainable development itself, its interpretation in the Arctic Council can be said to maximise consensus rather than clarity. This challenge is further amplified by the separation of sustainable development and environmental protection as two founding pillars of the Council. The Arctic Council has generated large amounts of scientific research and assessments, and identified important gaps in knowledge. It has not gone as far in outlining consequences for policy, long-term strategies and policy recommendations. Sustainable development as an idea in the Arctic Council takes a similar form as the mainstream Brundtland definition, with an added focus on culture, health and indigenous issues. In relation to climate change, the focus is almost exclusively on adaption, which can serve to shift the discussion away from connections between the dimensions of sustainable development. In a changing Arctic where actors are unsure of the future and their interests in ...
format Master Thesis
author Mevatne, Martine
author_facet Mevatne, Martine
author_sort Mevatne, Martine
title "On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council
title_short "On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council
title_full "On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council
title_fullStr "On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council
title_full_unstemmed "On Thin Ice?" Understanding Sustainable Development in the Arctic Council
title_sort "on thin ice?" understanding sustainable development in the arctic council
publisher Universitetet i Bergen (UiB)
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/1956/15805
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic Council
Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic Council
Arctic
Climate change
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1956/15805
op_rights Copyright the author. All rights reserved.
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