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NORDIC AND OTHER SUB-REGIONAL GROUPINGS: THEIR ROLES IN THE ARCTIC Remarks by Alyson JK Bailes, Háskóli Íslands (based on a joint research paper with Kristmundur Þór Ólafsson) Nordic House, 16 October 2012
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The Arctic full of institutions… The Arctic Council UNLOSC, IMO, other global frameworks (Potential) roles of Europe-wide bodies: EU OTHER (SUB-)REGIONAL GROUPS +FRAMEWORKS: - Nordic Cooperation (West Nordic, Nordic/ Baltic) - Barents Euro-Arctic Council - EU’s Northern Dimension
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QUESTIONS ABOUT THE SUB- REGIONAL GROUPS: Do they help at all in Arctic governance - by direct impact? - in policy and decision making(e.g. by forming joint positions among members)? If not, why not? Should they do better? Or is it wiser not to try?
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General Limitations Typical features of local/sub-regional groupings in Europe: WEAKNESSES: lack of legal force, funds, political salience; complexity and overlap; avoidance of ‘hard’ inter-state issues (‘intra- domestic’, ‘de-securitized’) STRENGTHS: inclusive (inc. across dividing lines), modest + non-threatening, ‘subsidiarity’, room for non-state involvement/ownership
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But how ‘inclusive’ are these bodies? All Nordics are in all of them Separate Faroes+Greenland seats only in WNC and NC Baltic States not in anything except EU’s Northern Dimension – where they have no special ‘regional’ status – and the Council of Baltic Sea States, which doesn’t address the Arctic THUS: at first sight, hard to use existing bodies for a broad ‘Western’ or ‘small states’ front
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Individual roles: EU’s Northern Dimension Renewed in 2006 with higher propfile for Iceland, Norway, Russia Includes ‘Arctic window’ + relationship with Greenland; relevant aims + projects; EU cash But project-based rather than policy platform More basically, the 5 Nordics don’t agree on how EU’s general role in Arctic should develop: so unlikely to use this for a ‘common front’
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BARENTS EURO-ARCTIC COUNCIL Direct, tangible impact on conditions in European High North (funds) - Including better atmospherics with Russia; reduced tension, local stability/development + soft-security cooperation Strong sub-governmental/non-state-actor roles EU involvement No direct link to Arctic Council (tho’ project interface), no attempt to create common policy fronts – of course, not easy with Russia there!
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NORDIC + WEST NORDIC COOPERATION Nordic states’ coordinated Arctic Council Presidencies + reform efforts Joint Arctic research programme (cash) Link with Stoltenberg def. coop. process Pressure from Nordic Council for ‘joint strategy’, ditto from West Nordic Council Parliamentary+political dialogue with Baltics BUT Intra-Nordic strategy differences; reluctance to address/reconcile ‘hard’ national interests
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To do more, or not to try? Respect inherent limitations of such groups: must preserve ‘process’ effects + trust Tackling hard issues divisive – and ineffective Foolish to undermine AC, which struggles with its own limitations Better to aim at complementarity, spread of best practice, and more project coordination Also a less controversial ‘back door’ for EU involvement, in a framework fixed by Nordics and maybe Baltics – if they know what they want!
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Next Steps… Doors seem most open in Nordic, West Nordic and Nordic-Baltic frameworks Time for a Nordic initiative: if not joint strategy, perhaps common Arctic values, joint risk assessment, shared ‘situational awareness’, or…? Scope for West Nordic coordination eg on SAR + other civil security issues, oil/gas angle, also education and research (including ‘small state’ aspect) Explore Nordic/Baltic ‘soft coordination’ through parliamentary impact on Nordic and Baltic governments, influencing lines taken in bigger groupings (focus on EU for the present)
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