Russian Activity in the High North: NATO's Arctic Quandary

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Title Russian Activity in the High North: NATO's Arctic Quandary
Creator Elise Reifschneider
Subject MACL
Description The Arctic is a historically cooperative region that is undergoing a geopolitical shift, due largely in part to the impact of anthropocentric climate change. The five Arctic rim states - Norway, Canada, Russia, Denmark (Greenland), and the United States - all face new security challenges as the region begins to open up to trade and further energy extraction activity. One of those states, Russia, has taken a security initiative, establishing bases and rebuilding Soviet-era military sites. The other four states, members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), are facing an increasingly securitized region where they have substantiated interests, but lack a cohesive strategy. As tensions rise between NATO and Russia in other parts of the world, the potential for Arctic relations to freeze becomes increasingly conceivable. Understanding Russia's recent Arctic activity, current regional governance, and the role of state-interdependence allowed for an issues analysis on the High North. This analysis concluded that scholars do not agree on vocabulary regarding Russian activity, there is disagreement among NATO countries of how to approach Russian efforts in the Arctic, and both sides have different cultural understandings of the region, leading to a divergence in dialogue between policy-makers.
Publisher Westminster College
Date 2015-05
Type Text; Image
Language eng
Rights Management Digital copyright 2015, Westminster College. All rights Reserved.
ARK ark:/87278/s674002z
Setname wc_ir
ID 1094150
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s674002z
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