Russian and Norwegian interests intersect and occasionally collide in the Barents Sea and Svalbard, an Arctic geopolitical hotspot where lucrative fisheries, extensive energy resources and strategic nuclear forces exist in relatively close proximity. To analyze why simmering tensions between Norway and Russia in the Barents-Svalbard region have once again risen to the surface, Polar Geopolitics is joined by Dr. Andreas Østhagen, a senior research fellow at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute and an expert on Arctic geopolitics and the Barents Sea.
Resilient Regime at 60: An international law perspective on the ATS
ATS under pressure: Dome A, Australia and great power geopolitics in Antarctica
Deep dive into Ocean and Cryosphere IPCC Report with coordinating lead author Martin Sommerkorn
Paul Musgrave on Trump and Greenland in a Global and Historical Context
Hot Take on Trump's Greenland Gambit
Frozen Claims and Contemporary Geopolitics: History and Heritage in Antarctica
2007 and Beyond: The Media and Narratives of Geopolitical Competition in the Arctic
Greenpeace, CCAMLR and MPAs: An NGO Perspective on Protecting Antarctica
Greenland’s Lost Norse: Parables of Adaptation from the North Atlantic
The Arctic Council: Indispensable international regime?
King of the Cryosphere: Antarctica and the Earth system with Will Steffen
Climate Adaptation and Food Security in Alaskan indigenous communities
Michael Byers: Outer Space and the Arctic—Governance in Cold, Dark and Dangerous Places
John Holdren: Climate change, the Arctic and current U.S policies
Arctic Council's ambivalent engagement with climate change
The Geopolitics of Greenland within the Kingdom of Denmark: Jon Rahbek-Clemmensen pt. 2
Jon Rahbek-Clemmensen pt. 1: Arctic governance and the A5 ten years after Ilulissat
Klaus Dodds pt. 2: UK Arctic Policy, Arctic Council and potential British Antarctic strategy
Klaus Dodds pt. 1: Geopolitics, Ross Sea MPA, and CAO fisheries moratorium
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