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[[link removed]] [[link removed]] Winter 2022
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The New North [[link removed]]
[[link removed]]The Arctic is undergoing dynamic and rapid changes across a wide spectrum of environmental, political, social, cultural, economic, and security landscapes. Once thought of as distant and barren, the Arctic is now woven into the fiber of the broader global community. This new reality brings opportunities and challenges. We invite you to explore The New North.
READ NOW [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]] IntroductionThe New North
by Mike Sfraga
In this introduction to The New North , Mike Sfraga provides insightful context for the issue, helping readers understand the rapidly shifting dynamics since our last Arctic issue in 2017.
READ [[link removed]]
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U.S. Engagement in the Arctic, Present and Future Maine and the Global Arctic
by Senator Lisa Murkowski, Alaska by Senator Angus King, Maine
Alaska’s senior Senator and co-chair of the Senate Arctic Caucus makes the case for multiple, purposeful, and complementary investments in the Arctic, that she says will strengthen U.S. security, the economy, and more. As co-chair of the Senate Arctic Caucus, Senator King shares the historic and enduring relationship Maine has with the Arctic and outlines why his state is well positioned for the Arctic of the future.
READ [[link removed]] READ [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]] InteractiveArctic Youth and the Anthropocene
In this digital experience, the Polar Institute’s Michaela Stith – an emerging Arctic leader in her own right – brings us prescient perspectives from Arctic youth.
EXPLORE [[link removed]]
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The New North is the Global Arctic Greenland at the Center of a Changing Arctic
by Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson by Premier Múte B. Egede
From growing investments and attention from world superpowers to global energy needs, to tourism, the former President of Iceland makes the case that the Arctic of today is more global in nature than it has ever been. From addressing climate change to Indigenous rights, and more, Greenland is poised to assume an important role in the new Arctic and a more prominent position on the world stage.
READ [[link removed]] READ [[link removed]]
Also In This Issue
*
Arctic
Conservation
in
the
Hands
of
Indigenous
Peoples
[[link removed]]
by
Victoria
Qutuuq
Buschman
*
Safeguarding
Traditional
Indigenous
Knowledge:
Nurturing
the
Next
Generation
of
Reindeer
Herders
[[link removed]]
by
Aishwarya
Jagani
*
Reducing
Risks
in
the
Arctic
During
a
Time
of
increased
Volatility
[[link removed]]
by
Jeppe
Kofod,
Denmark
Foreign
Minister
*
The
Russian
Maritime
Arctic:
Seven
Strategic
Drivers
of
Change
and
Uncertainty
[[link removed]]
by
Lawson
W.
Brigham
*
The
Rising
Importance
of
Non-Arctic
States
in
the
Arctic
[[link removed]]
by
Evan
T.
Bloom
*
The
World
Needs
the
Arctic,
and
the
Region
Needs
People
[[link removed]]
by
Mads
Qvist
Frederiksen
*
Setting
our
Sights
by
the
Northern
Lights
[[link removed]]
by
Melody
Schreiber
*
Indigenous
Leadership
in
the
Arctic:
A
Conversation
with
Gunn-Britt
Retter
of
the
Saami
Council
[[link removed]]
by
Stephanie
Bowen
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