The creation of Ruskaya Arktika: environmental project hiding Arctic strategy in Russia
by Camille Hamm
Co-authored with Sébastien Maffione (Arctic Studies March 2011).
21 views
Seen by:Polar Partner or Poles Apart? How two US think tanks represent Russia
Paper for Postgraduate Conference of Political Studies Association
This study investigates representations of Russia’s territorial claim in the Arctic produced by a liberal (Brookings)... more
This study investigates representations of Russia’s territorial claim in the Arctic produced by a liberal (Brookings) and neoconservative US think tank (Heritage). The former promotes international cooperation, while the second considers the world as a source of potential threats to the US. How do their representations of Russia link their institutional context to their policy advice?
Brookings portrays Russia as a “normal” Arctic country (i.e. non-exotic) and downplays the risk of Russian militarization of the region. Heritage however represents Russia as a threat owing to its perceived aggressiveness and greed, depicting the country as ‘non-Western’. Regarding representational practices, Brookings uses twice a Cold War analogy. Nevertheless, the analogy does not create impressions that the current government shares qualities with those of the USSR.
Contrarily, Heritage uses many representational practices to depict Russia as a threat, including analogies (references to the Cold War and the totalitarian regime of Stalin), labels (“aggressive”) and metaphors (“Russian bear”). Its discourse further contains ‘geopolitical othering,’ which implies that Russia is a non-Western, semi-civilised and unfriendly country. Moreover, the authors employ the practice of narrative closure. For example, only Russia’s interest in the natural resources of the Arctic is mentioned, and in a disapproving way. Nonetheless, the other circumpolar countries would also like to benefit, if possible, from resource exploration in the Arctic. The use of all these representational practices tends to depict Russia as a threat to the US.
Wrapping up, Russia´s Arctic policy seems to be informed by international law, a preference for diplomacy, the use of military force and strong language. Brookings stresses the first two foreign policy characteristics, while Heritage emphasises the last two characteristics.
EU Arctic Footprint and Policy Assessment
Final report co-authored with S. Cavalieri, E. McGlynn, S. Stoessel, F. Stuke, M. Bruckner, T. Koivurova, N. Sellheim, A. Stepien, K. Hossain, S. Duyck, and A.E. Nilsson
The EU Arctic Footprint and Policy Assessment report assesses the EU‘s current footprint on the Arctic environment and... more The EU Arctic Footprint and Policy Assessment report assesses the EU‘s current footprint on the Arctic environment and evaluates how it could change over time. The effectiveness of the EU‘s current environment-related policies is analysed, including how these policies relate to current and future footprint scenarios. Options for improving EU policy are presented.
211 views
Seen by:
