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Diplomacy and the Arctic Council / Danita Catherine Burke.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, 2019Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780773559745
  • 0773559744
  • 9780773559738
  • 0773559736
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Diplomacy and the Arctic Council.DDC classification:
  • 341.4/4091632 23
LOC classification:
  • KZ4110.P65 B87 2019
Other classification:
  • cci1icc
Online resources:
Contents:
Conceptualizing the Book -- Funding -- Institutional Memory and Knowledge Depreciation -- Keeping National Politics Out of the Forum -- Language Barriers -- Communication and Misunderstandings -- The Observer Question -- Coastal versus Non-Coastal States and the Pressure to Evolve.
Summary: "The Arctic Council, created in 1996, has facilitated over twenty years of successful democracy and regional cooperation between Russia and the seven other Arctic states--the United States, Canada, Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Finland. What has allowed this unity to continue despite political turmoil between these nations? In Diplomacy and the Arctic Council Danita Catherine Burke argues that the Arctic Council is a club--a group of states that mutually benefit from voluntary collaboration and that use the forum as a vessel to help define and guide the parameters of their cooperation. How the club members identify and address challenges reflects power relations among them, which vary depending on the topic under discussion or debate. Providing insight into the daily practices of the Arctic Council and the relative status of its member states, Burke seeks to understand why major international events, such as the 2014 Russian-Ukrainian conflict over the Crimea region, do not deter the Arctic countries from cooperating. The author posits that the Arctic Council's club structure and its strategy of practising and projecting unity have allowed it to weather the storm of international conflicts involving its core membership. Through interviews with representatives from the Arctic states and Indigenous peoples, Diplomacy and the Arctic Council offers a unique look into the diplomatic practices of the Council after more than two decades of operation."-- Provided by publisher
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Print version record.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Conceptualizing the Book -- Funding -- Institutional Memory and Knowledge Depreciation -- Keeping National Politics Out of the Forum -- Language Barriers -- Communication and Misunderstandings -- The Observer Question -- Coastal versus Non-Coastal States and the Pressure to Evolve.

"The Arctic Council, created in 1996, has facilitated over twenty years of successful democracy and regional cooperation between Russia and the seven other Arctic states--the United States, Canada, Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Finland. What has allowed this unity to continue despite political turmoil between these nations? In Diplomacy and the Arctic Council Danita Catherine Burke argues that the Arctic Council is a club--a group of states that mutually benefit from voluntary collaboration and that use the forum as a vessel to help define and guide the parameters of their cooperation. How the club members identify and address challenges reflects power relations among them, which vary depending on the topic under discussion or debate. Providing insight into the daily practices of the Arctic Council and the relative status of its member states, Burke seeks to understand why major international events, such as the 2014 Russian-Ukrainian conflict over the Crimea region, do not deter the Arctic countries from cooperating. The author posits that the Arctic Council's club structure and its strategy of practising and projecting unity have allowed it to weather the storm of international conflicts involving its core membership. Through interviews with representatives from the Arctic states and Indigenous peoples, Diplomacy and the Arctic Council offers a unique look into the diplomatic practices of the Council after more than two decades of operation."-- Provided by publisher

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