As the Arctic “opens up” to exploration and economic development, a new stage in colonization looms. This essay builds toward a vision of Arctic nation-states meeting with the Inuit to work out how they might together come to an understanding of how decisions about the future of the Arctic may be appropriately made. The Inuit are currently actively resisting the new wave of colonization within a framework built on the bedrock of nation-state sovereignty. The notion of “sovereignty” serves as a keystone in a system of controlling narratives, functioning to generate and police ways of thinking about decision-making processes, a notion deriving much of its power from its being interwoven with notions of legitimacy and “right.” This concept fun...
In contrast to the rising tide of alarmist news articles warning the world about potential clashes b...
Since the early 1970s, Indigenous nations in northern Canada and the United States have secured a he...
The Arctic has long appeared to outsiders as a vast, forbidding wasteland or, alternatively, as a st...
As the Arctic “opens up” to exploration and economic development, a new stage in colonization looms....
This paper addresses the positioning of the Inuit with regard to the institution of sovereignty with...
With Inuit identifying as a people beyond nation-state boundaries, and Nunavummiut and Greenlanders ...
The author proposes an analysis of Inuit governance at the national and international level, discuss...
The Arctic region has recently received renewed attention because of the effects of climate change a...
As a concept, sovereignty is not only highly contested but historically contingent. Some scholars ar...
The purpose of this paper is to sketch how Inuit and the Canadian public, and Inuit organisations an...
This chapter considers Indigenous self-determination in the Arctic from a comparative perspective wi...
© Cambridge University Press 2016. This paper compares four maps produced by the Canadian governmen...
This thesis examines the impact of the 'Nunavut Project' on Inuit identity, governance, and society....
This research explores the temporal, spatial and political scapes of the Northern Indigenous Nations...
In 2007, the Canadian government announced its commitment to the development of the Canadian North t...
In contrast to the rising tide of alarmist news articles warning the world about potential clashes b...
Since the early 1970s, Indigenous nations in northern Canada and the United States have secured a he...
The Arctic has long appeared to outsiders as a vast, forbidding wasteland or, alternatively, as a st...
As the Arctic “opens up” to exploration and economic development, a new stage in colonization looms....
This paper addresses the positioning of the Inuit with regard to the institution of sovereignty with...
With Inuit identifying as a people beyond nation-state boundaries, and Nunavummiut and Greenlanders ...
The author proposes an analysis of Inuit governance at the national and international level, discuss...
The Arctic region has recently received renewed attention because of the effects of climate change a...
As a concept, sovereignty is not only highly contested but historically contingent. Some scholars ar...
The purpose of this paper is to sketch how Inuit and the Canadian public, and Inuit organisations an...
This chapter considers Indigenous self-determination in the Arctic from a comparative perspective wi...
© Cambridge University Press 2016. This paper compares four maps produced by the Canadian governmen...
This thesis examines the impact of the 'Nunavut Project' on Inuit identity, governance, and society....
This research explores the temporal, spatial and political scapes of the Northern Indigenous Nations...
In 2007, the Canadian government announced its commitment to the development of the Canadian North t...
In contrast to the rising tide of alarmist news articles warning the world about potential clashes b...
Since the early 1970s, Indigenous nations in northern Canada and the United States have secured a he...
The Arctic has long appeared to outsiders as a vast, forbidding wasteland or, alternatively, as a st...