Local infrastructures and global crises in the remote Arctic: implications for the EU arctic policy
Götze, JacquelineExterne Publikationen (2022)
in: Arctic Winter College 2021 Policy Briefs (1), 18-22
The COVID-19 pandemic and the climate crises are both revealing resilience and inequalities in the Arctic region.
These inequalities are manifold, and many relate to infrastructure – either lack of or unequal, not cultural-appropriate access to them in a remote context.
Infrastructure can provide an overarching framework for policymaking in the Arctic, also for the EU.
The EU should consider the relevance of the local level more strategically and link this relevance to infrastructure issues
Weitere IDOS-Expert*innen zu diesem Thema
-
Asimeng, Emmanuel Theodore
Stadtplanung, Nachhaltigkeit
-
Baumann, Max-Otto
Politikwissenschaft
-
Berger, Axel
Politikwissenschaft
-
Goedeking, Nicholas
Vergleichende politische Ökonomie
-
Gutheil, Lena
Ethnologie
-
Haug, Sebastian
Politikwissenschaft
-
Hilbrich, Sören
Ökonomie
-
Jauregui Fung, Franco
Architektur, Urbane Ballungsräume
-
Kachelmann, Matthias
Politikwissenschaft
-
Li, Hangwei
Politikwissenschaft
-
Löpelt, Sarah
Internationale Beziehungen und Nachhaltigkeitspolitik
-
Morare, Ditebogo Modiegi
Politikwissenschaften
-
Novoselova, Anna
Politikwissenschaften
-
Siriwardane-de Zoysa, Rapti
Soziologie
-
Wingens, Christopher
Politikwissenschaftler
-
Zumegen, Lisa
Urbane Transformation