Results 161 to 170 of about 933 (190)

Anthromes and terrestrial carbon

open access: yes
PLANTS, PEOPLE, PLANET, EarlyView.
Anthony P. Walker   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

Russia's Arctic Policy

2020
Russian Analytical Digest (RAD ...
Aliyev, Nurlan   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Singapore’s Arctic Policy

2016
Singapore regards itself as vulnerable to the external environment due to its size, geography, and ethnic diversity. Singapore perceives developments in the Arctic, particularly the emergence of the new sea route, could potentially threaten Singapore’s position as a maritime node and make Singapore a global irrelevance as with other historic maritime ...
openaire   +1 more source

Arctic Environmental Policy

1996
Lincoln Bloomfield defined the Arctic as an area “yet largely untouched by existing or prospective international agreements” (Bloomfield 1981, 87). The Arctic he spoke about was the last unmanaged frontier. This area limited by the Arctic circle is nowadays a focus for developing of natural resources. Oil, gas and minerals as well as fisheries form the
openaire   +1 more source

India’s Arctic Policy

2016
India tends to look at its Arctic engagement through an Antarctic lens, preferring to treat the Arctic as a global commons subject to an international legal regime similar to the Antarctic Treaty. India’s foreign policy towards the Arctic is backed by a pragmatic awareness of an intra-Asia competition against China, a sense of victimization under ...
openaire   +1 more source

Arctic Amplification and Policy Recommendations

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2021
The objectives of the present study are to examine the consequences of increasing temperatures in the Artic and provide policy recommendations. We present a review of the connections between climate indicators and how these are amplified in the Arctic region. This has a direct effect in distant regions around the world.
openaire   +1 more source

China’s Arctic Policy

2016
China entered the Arctic as part of its “omnidirectional diplomacy” from the late 1990s, branching out and going global, supported by rapid economic growth. As a “near-Arctic state,” China has a strong desire to understand the implications of a changing Arctic, due to its potentially beneficial or harmful effects.
openaire   +1 more source

Emerging UK Arctic policy

International Affairs, 2013
How is the United Kingdom engaging with changing geopolitics of the Arctic in the twenty-first century? This article considers the UK's contemporary interest(s) in the Arctic at a time of unprecedented change in the northern latitudes of our planet. In particular, it focuses on the ongoing emergence of UK Arctic policy as an assemblage of processes ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Arctic: Press, Policy and the Arctic Council

The Yearbook of Polar Law Online, 2020
The changing situation in the Arctic due to global warming has prompted media coverage of a supposed “scramble for the Arctic,” an “Arctic boom,” or an “Arctic Bonanza.” Some even go further, deploying the rhetoric of a “New Cold War,” predicting an inevitable clash between the United States and Russia over interests in the region.
openaire   +1 more source

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