1st Edition

Emerging Legal Orders in the Arctic The Role of Non-Arctic Actors

    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    More than ever before the changing environmental and political landscape in the Arctic requires stability and foreseeability based on resilient common norms. The emerging legal orders in the Arctic cannot be legitimately created or effectively implemented unless all relevant actors are involved. Simultaneously, it must always be based on respect for the sovereign rights of the eight Arctic states in the region, as well as the tradition and cultural livelihood of the local communities. It is this delicate balance between Arctic and non-Arctic interests that is the core problématique for the emerging legal orders in the Arctic.

    Emerging Legal Orders in the Arctic critically examines the role of non-Arctic actors in this advancement of the shape and scope of the Arctic legal order. Discussing the admittance and participation of Observer states and organisations in the Arctic Council, including task force meetings where new treaties are negotiated, it details the issues and successes this can result in. Setting up the context of the current legal orders in the Arctic, the book discusses Asian, indigenous and European perspectives, amongst others. There is a strong focus on the groundbreaking fisheries agreement of November 2017 in the Central Arctic Ocean (CAO), and the impact on both Arctic and non-Arctic actors. Interests in marine living resources, scientific cooperation and the Arctic shipping regimes and governance are also thoroughly discussed from multiple perspectives.

    The book combines the expertise of academics and practitioners in the fields of international law and Arctic governance, uniquely focusing on Asian actors in the Arctic legal order-making. The resulting study is a fascinating insight into the interplay between non-Arctic actors and the Arctic legal order, and will be invaluable to academics in the field of Arctic and international law.

    Contents

    Illustrations

    Contributors

    Acknowledgements

    Acronyms

    1. An Ocean in the Making: Non-Arctic Actors and the Emerging Arctic Legal Orders
    2. AKIHO SHIBATA, LEILEI ZOU, NIKOLAS SELLHEIM & MARZIA SCOPELLITI

      Part I – Setting the Contexts

    3. The Current and Future Role of Non-Arctic States in Arctic Governance
    4. TIMO KOIVUROVA

    5. The Rise of Asia and Arctic Legal Order-making: Political-Economic Settings
    6. AKI TONAMI

    7. Japan’s Role in Formation and Strengthening of Arctic Legal Orders
    8. KEIJI IDE

    9. China’s Arctic Policy White Paper and Its Influence on the Future of Arctic Legal Developments
    10. EGILL THOR NIELSSON & BJARNI MAR MAGNUSSON

      Part II – People(s) in the Arctic

    11. Our Homeland: Arctic Indigenous Peoples’ Perspective of Non-Arctic States
    12. DALEE SAMBO DOROUGH

    13. Sustaining a Conservationist Agenda? NGO-Influence on Arctic Sealing, Whaling and Hydrocarbon Regimes
    14. MARZIA SCOPELLITI & NIKOLAS SELLHEIM

      Part III – Arctic Marine Legal Order-making

    15. The Five-plus-five Process on Central Arctic Ocean Fisheries Negotiations: Reflecting Interests of Arctic and Non-Arctic Actors
    16. JOJI MORISHITA

    17. Participation in the Central Arctic Ocean Fisheries Agreement

    ERIK MOLENAAR

    10. The Role of Transnational Knowledge Networks and Epistemic Communities in Arctic Shipping Governance

    RASMUS GJEDSSØ BERTELSEN

    11. Russia’s Legislative Development Pertaining to the Northern Sea Route and Its Interaction with Russian-Sino Arctic Cooperation

    LEILEI ZOU

    Part IV – The Universality of Science and the Arctic Council

    12. The Arctic Science Cooperation Agreement: A Perspective from Non-Arctic Actors

    AKIHO SHIBATA

    1. State Observers and Science Cooperation in the Arctic Council: Same Same But Different?

    SEBASTIAN KNECHT & JENNIFER SPENCE

    14. China in the Arctic Council: Existing Problems and Prospective Solutions

    YUANYUAN REN

    Appendix

    Agreement on Enhancing International Arctic Scientific Cooperation, signed by the eight Arctic states on 11 May 2017, entered into force on 23 May 2018

    Agreement to Prevent Unregulated High Seas Fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean, signed by Canada, the People’s Republic of China, the Kingdom of Denmark in respect for the Faroe Islands and Greenland, Japan, the Republic of Korea, the Kingdom of Norway, the Russian Federation, the United States of America and the European Union on 3 October 2018

    Index

    Biography

    Akiho Shibata is a Professor of International Law and Director, Polar Cooperation Research Centre (PCRC) at Kobe University, Japan.

    Leilei Zou is a Professor at Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai, China.

    Nikolas P. Sellheim is a postdoctoral researcher at the Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), University of Helsinki, Finland.

    Marzia Scopelliti is a PhD candidate in Law at Complutense University, Madrid, Spain.