Human Flags - Scientists and Resource Politics in the Arctic
(2015) Matchpoints Seminar 2015- Abstract
- The Arctic is a popular place to do research. Many countries fund scientific research projects in the region, and international scientists are a considerable part of the Arctic population. Knowledge and expertise about the Arctic is no longer restricted to the Arctic states. Less controversial than flag planting at the North Pole and test drilling for oil, scientists and research stations are often regarded as apolitical. While knowledge about Arctic ecosystem, ice-pack flows, and atmospheric changes are important, the heavy investments made in Arctic research can also be viewed as opportunities for the sponsor to claim physical presence and know-how in and about the Arctic. A major resource discovery within the proximity of a research... (More)
- The Arctic is a popular place to do research. Many countries fund scientific research projects in the region, and international scientists are a considerable part of the Arctic population. Knowledge and expertise about the Arctic is no longer restricted to the Arctic states. Less controversial than flag planting at the North Pole and test drilling for oil, scientists and research stations are often regarded as apolitical. While knowledge about Arctic ecosystem, ice-pack flows, and atmospheric changes are important, the heavy investments made in Arctic research can also be viewed as opportunities for the sponsor to claim physical presence and know-how in and about the Arctic. A major resource discovery within the proximity of a research station or research area could potentially rock this seemingly innocent practice. This paper will critically explore the presence of international scientists and research centres on Svalbard, historically and today. In particular the focus is on researchers from non-Arctic states such as China, Japan and South Korea. What role do scientists and knowledge-production play at the so-called new resource frontier? If science is a successful strategy for non-Arctic states to enter the region, does this also give access to resource politics? The aim is to provide an overview of scientists present on Svalbard, to discuss how scientists have been constructed as apolitical actors and how science and knowledge-production can work as political projects. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/2a901a76-5fd4-4ffc-bd94-9677d6a0e9d2
- author
- W. Lindberg, Helena LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2015-11-13
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- unpublished
- subject
- pages
- 1 pages
- conference name
- Matchpoints Seminar 2015
- conference location
- Aarhus, Denmark
- conference dates
- 2015-11-12 - 2015-11-13
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 2a901a76-5fd4-4ffc-bd94-9677d6a0e9d2
- date added to LUP
- 2019-03-11 14:31:22
- date last changed
- 2019-03-12 14:18:32
@misc{2a901a76-5fd4-4ffc-bd94-9677d6a0e9d2, abstract = {{The Arctic is a popular place to do research. Many countries fund scientific research projects in the region, and international scientists are a considerable part of the Arctic population. Knowledge and expertise about the Arctic is no longer restricted to the Arctic states. Less controversial than flag planting at the North Pole and test drilling for oil, scientists and research stations are often regarded as apolitical. While knowledge about Arctic ecosystem, ice-pack flows, and atmospheric changes are important, the heavy investments made in Arctic research can also be viewed as opportunities for the sponsor to claim physical presence and know-how in and about the Arctic. A major resource discovery within the proximity of a research station or research area could potentially rock this seemingly innocent practice. This paper will critically explore the presence of international scientists and research centres on Svalbard, historically and today. In particular the focus is on researchers from non-Arctic states such as China, Japan and South Korea. What role do scientists and knowledge-production play at the so-called new resource frontier? If science is a successful strategy for non-Arctic states to enter the region, does this also give access to resource politics? The aim is to provide an overview of scientists present on Svalbard, to discuss how scientists have been constructed as apolitical actors and how science and knowledge-production can work as political projects.}}, author = {{W. Lindberg, Helena}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{11}}, title = {{Human Flags - Scientists and Resource Politics in the Arctic}}, year = {{2015}}, }