Environmental and Human Security in the Arctic (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Hoogensen Gjørv, Gunhild; Tanentzap, Andrew; Goloviznina, Marina; Bazely, Dawn
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Environmental and Human Security in the Arctic (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Hoogensen Gjørv, Gunhild; Tanentzap, Andrew; Goloviznina, Marina; Bazely, Dawn
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This is the first comprehensive exploration of why human security is relevant to the Arctic and what achieving it can mean, covering the areas of health of the environment, identity of peoples, supply of traditional foods, community health, economic opportunities, and political stability.
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This is the first comprehensive exploration of why human security is relevant to the Arctic and what achieving it can mean, covering the areas of health of the environment, identity of peoples, supply of traditional foods, community health, economic opportunities, and political stability.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Oktober 2013
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134634859
- Artikelnr.: 39704077
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Oktober 2013
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134634859
- Artikelnr.: 39704077
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Gunhild Hoogensen is Associate Professor in International Relations at the University of Tromsø , Norway. Dawn Bazely is Professor of Biology at York University, Toronto and is Director of IRIS, the university's Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (2006-11, 2012-13). Trained in the ecological field of plant-animal interactions, at the universities of Toronto and Oxford, she has carried out extensive field research in grasslands and forests, from temperate to arctic regions. She led the Canadian section of the International Polar Year project, GAPS, Gas, Arctic Peoples and Security, and recently spent her sabbatical as a Charles Bullard Fellow at Harvard Forest, Harvard University. Marina Goloviznina is a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Tromsø in the Department of Sociology, Political Science and Community Planning. Andrew Tanentzap is Banting Fellow at York University in the Department of Biology.
Foreword: Remarks by former Canadian Ambassador to Norway, Shirley Wolff
Serafini at the Human Security in the Arctic Seminar (May 2004) 1.
Introduction: Can we broaden our understanding of security in the Arctic?
PART 1: Differing Conceptions of Security in the Arctic 2. Cold War
legacies in Russia's Svalbard policy 3. A new northern security:
Environmental degradation and risks, climate change, energy security,
trans-nationalism and flows of globalization and governance 4. Virtuous
imperialism or a shared global objective?: The relevance of human security
in the global North PART 2: Environmental Security 5. The sustainability
transition: Governing coupled human/natural systems 6. Arctic environmental
security and abrupt climate change 7. Climate change impacts, adaptation,
and the technology interface 8. Bridging the GAPS between ecology and human
security PART 3: Health Security 9. Telemedicine as a tool for improving
human security 10. Health and human security: Communicable diseases in the
post-Soviet Arctic PART 4: Human Security: Women and Indigenous Groups 11.
Aboriginal self-determination and resource development activity: improving
human security in the Canadian Arctic? 12. Women's participation in
decision making: human security in the Canadian Arctic 13. Human security
and women's security reality in Northwest Russia 14. The political
exclusion and commodification of women 15. Conclusion: Revisiting Arctic
security
Serafini at the Human Security in the Arctic Seminar (May 2004) 1.
Introduction: Can we broaden our understanding of security in the Arctic?
PART 1: Differing Conceptions of Security in the Arctic 2. Cold War
legacies in Russia's Svalbard policy 3. A new northern security:
Environmental degradation and risks, climate change, energy security,
trans-nationalism and flows of globalization and governance 4. Virtuous
imperialism or a shared global objective?: The relevance of human security
in the global North PART 2: Environmental Security 5. The sustainability
transition: Governing coupled human/natural systems 6. Arctic environmental
security and abrupt climate change 7. Climate change impacts, adaptation,
and the technology interface 8. Bridging the GAPS between ecology and human
security PART 3: Health Security 9. Telemedicine as a tool for improving
human security 10. Health and human security: Communicable diseases in the
post-Soviet Arctic PART 4: Human Security: Women and Indigenous Groups 11.
Aboriginal self-determination and resource development activity: improving
human security in the Canadian Arctic? 12. Women's participation in
decision making: human security in the Canadian Arctic 13. Human security
and women's security reality in Northwest Russia 14. The political
exclusion and commodification of women 15. Conclusion: Revisiting Arctic
security
Foreword: Remarks by former Canadian Ambassador to Norway, Shirley Wolff
Serafini at the Human Security in the Arctic Seminar (May 2004) 1.
Introduction: Can we broaden our understanding of security in the Arctic?
PART 1: Differing Conceptions of Security in the Arctic 2. Cold War
legacies in Russia's Svalbard policy 3. A new northern security:
Environmental degradation and risks, climate change, energy security,
trans-nationalism and flows of globalization and governance 4. Virtuous
imperialism or a shared global objective?: The relevance of human security
in the global North PART 2: Environmental Security 5. The sustainability
transition: Governing coupled human/natural systems 6. Arctic environmental
security and abrupt climate change 7. Climate change impacts, adaptation,
and the technology interface 8. Bridging the GAPS between ecology and human
security PART 3: Health Security 9. Telemedicine as a tool for improving
human security 10. Health and human security: Communicable diseases in the
post-Soviet Arctic PART 4: Human Security: Women and Indigenous Groups 11.
Aboriginal self-determination and resource development activity: improving
human security in the Canadian Arctic? 12. Women's participation in
decision making: human security in the Canadian Arctic 13. Human security
and women's security reality in Northwest Russia 14. The political
exclusion and commodification of women 15. Conclusion: Revisiting Arctic
security
Serafini at the Human Security in the Arctic Seminar (May 2004) 1.
Introduction: Can we broaden our understanding of security in the Arctic?
PART 1: Differing Conceptions of Security in the Arctic 2. Cold War
legacies in Russia's Svalbard policy 3. A new northern security:
Environmental degradation and risks, climate change, energy security,
trans-nationalism and flows of globalization and governance 4. Virtuous
imperialism or a shared global objective?: The relevance of human security
in the global North PART 2: Environmental Security 5. The sustainability
transition: Governing coupled human/natural systems 6. Arctic environmental
security and abrupt climate change 7. Climate change impacts, adaptation,
and the technology interface 8. Bridging the GAPS between ecology and human
security PART 3: Health Security 9. Telemedicine as a tool for improving
human security 10. Health and human security: Communicable diseases in the
post-Soviet Arctic PART 4: Human Security: Women and Indigenous Groups 11.
Aboriginal self-determination and resource development activity: improving
human security in the Canadian Arctic? 12. Women's participation in
decision making: human security in the Canadian Arctic 13. Human security
and women's security reality in Northwest Russia 14. The political
exclusion and commodification of women 15. Conclusion: Revisiting Arctic
security