The Arctic Council’s (AC) openness to the outside world has become an increasingly important issue in the current debate on its shape and place in the Arctic governance structure. The growing interest of states such as China and entities like the European Union in obtaining Observer status on the Council, and the search for an enhanced role by existing Observers, has triggered an emotional debate between the Arctic states, Observers and Permanent Participants. Admission of new non-Arctic actors as Observers and strengthening the role of the status might have broader consequences for the Council’s design, functioning and general direction in which international relations in the Arctic would unfold. This article attempts to develop a new conc...
The article provides a 10th anniversary assessment of the Arctic Council’s work, regional ocean gove...
The eight Arctic states (Canada, Denmark/Greenland, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the Russian Fe...
The Arctic Council\u27s decision in 2013 to admit six new non-Arctic states as permanent observers s...
This article explores the possibility for an Arctic Council (AC) that would a have global voice, ach...
A lot of attention has been paid to Arctic affairs lately, due to the opportunities and challenges w...
Knecht S. The Politics of Arctic International Cooperation. Introducing a Dataset on Stakeholder Par...
The article emphasizes that the Arctic Council (AC) is a high level forum of cooperation, based on t...
The peculiarities of the institutional framework in the Arctic place the Arctic Council, with its ei...
Knecht S, Spence J. State Observers and Science Cooperation in the Arctic Council: Same Same but Dif...
The Arctic is changing at a rate unprecedented in history. The Arctic has a dynamic relationship wit...
-Since launching its first Arctic communiqué in 2008, the European Union has strived to be accepted ...
Although analyses of the EU’s external relations have typically focused on regions to the east or so...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021The Arctic Council is a collaborative forum of member ...
With the impacts of climate change on the Arctic, including the thinning and decreasing extent of se...
The Arctic Council is a high-level intergovernmental forum that provides a mechanism to address the ...
The article provides a 10th anniversary assessment of the Arctic Council’s work, regional ocean gove...
The eight Arctic states (Canada, Denmark/Greenland, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the Russian Fe...
The Arctic Council\u27s decision in 2013 to admit six new non-Arctic states as permanent observers s...
This article explores the possibility for an Arctic Council (AC) that would a have global voice, ach...
A lot of attention has been paid to Arctic affairs lately, due to the opportunities and challenges w...
Knecht S. The Politics of Arctic International Cooperation. Introducing a Dataset on Stakeholder Par...
The article emphasizes that the Arctic Council (AC) is a high level forum of cooperation, based on t...
The peculiarities of the institutional framework in the Arctic place the Arctic Council, with its ei...
Knecht S, Spence J. State Observers and Science Cooperation in the Arctic Council: Same Same but Dif...
The Arctic is changing at a rate unprecedented in history. The Arctic has a dynamic relationship wit...
-Since launching its first Arctic communiqué in 2008, the European Union has strived to be accepted ...
Although analyses of the EU’s external relations have typically focused on regions to the east or so...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021The Arctic Council is a collaborative forum of member ...
With the impacts of climate change on the Arctic, including the thinning and decreasing extent of se...
The Arctic Council is a high-level intergovernmental forum that provides a mechanism to address the ...
The article provides a 10th anniversary assessment of the Arctic Council’s work, regional ocean gove...
The eight Arctic states (Canada, Denmark/Greenland, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the Russian Fe...
The Arctic Council\u27s decision in 2013 to admit six new non-Arctic states as permanent observers s...