将北极概念化为冲突地带

Q4 Social Sciences
Gabriella Gricius
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引用次数: 1

摘要

北极已被定义为地缘政治竞争区域、国际和平区和采掘业的梦幻王国。当俄罗斯和美国等国家开始北极军事化和核化时,加拿大和挪威等其他北极国家已经动员起来支持北极合作。由于不断变化的地缘政治压力,20世纪80年代后期对北极的非非货币化并未成功。这种缺乏成就引出了一个问题:为什么今天北极似乎比以往任何时候都更快地升温?本文旨在确定北极是如何被美国和俄罗斯概念化为冲突地区的。在此过程中,本文考察了在这一概念中发挥作用的不同分析维度,包括不断变化的自然环境、不断演变的历史背景(如国家之间不断变化的权力动态)和国内政治。这些不同的安全北极框架有助于解释安全如何以及为什么涉及到北极的讨论。为此,我借鉴了目标国家的话语,并考察了这些特定话语在实践中表现出来的程度,并以关键的地缘政治为基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Conceptualising the Arctic as a Zone of Conflict
The Arctic has been conceptualised as a zone of geopolitical competition, an international zone of peace and the dreamlike realm for extractive industries. While states such as Russia and the United States have commenced a militarisation and nuclearisation of the Arctic, other Arctic states like Canada and Norway have mobilised support for Arctic cooperation. Due to changing geopolitical pressures, the desecuritisation of the Arctic in the late 1980s was not successful. This lack of attainment begs the question as to why today, the Arctic seems to be heating up faster than ever. This article aims to determine how the Arctic is conceptualised as a zone of conflict by the United States and Russia. In doing so, the article examines different analytical dimensions that play a role in this conceptualisation, including the changing natural environment, evolving historical context such as the changing power dynamics between countries, and domestic politics. These different framings of a securitised Arctic help to explain how and why security becomes involved in Arctic discourse. To do so, I draw upon discourses in target states and examine the extent to which these particular discourses are manifested in practice and build on critical geopolitics.
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来源期刊
Central European Journal of International and Security Studies
Central European Journal of International and Security Studies Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Central European Journal of International and Security Studies (CEJISS) was founded by Mitchell Belfer (Editor in Chief), David Erkomaishvili (Deputy Editor in Chief), Nigorakhon Turakhanova (Head of the Academic Centre) and Petr Kucera, in December 2006, as an autonomous wing of the Department of International Relations and European Studies at Metropolitan University Prague. The initial goal was to develop, and project globally, a uniquely Central European take on unfolding international and security issues. This entailed an initial “out-reach” programme to attract scholars from throughout the four Central European states – the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and the Slovak Republic – to participate in the journal as authors and members of the Editorial and (then) Advisory Boards. By the time of the first issue however, it became clear that CEJISS was also capable of acting as a platform for non-Central European scholars to present their academic research to a more regionalised audience. From issue 1:1 in June 2007 until the present, CEJISS has become, quite literally, a two-way street—it helps Central European scholars enter international academia and international scholars enter Central Europe.
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