Arctic Justice Environment, Society and Governance
Offering a unique introduction to the study of justice in the European, North American and Russian Arctic, this collection highlights the practical consequences of postcolonial legacies and climate change while championing a sustainable future for Arctic development and governance.
Autor principal: | |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Bristol :
Bristol University Press
2023.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009739865606719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover
- Half-title
- Series page
- Arctic Justice: Environment, Society and Governance
- Copyright information
- Table of Contents
- Series Preface
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: Justice in the Arctic
- Red threads of justice
- Structure of the volume
- Positions of justice
- 1 Applying a Transnational Theory of Justice to the Arctic
- Introduction
- Issues of justice - and injustice - in the Arctic
- Forst's theory of justice in transnational settings
- Arctic governance and transnational issues of justice
- Arctic exceptionalism?
- Assessing a Forstian transnational theory of justice in the Arctic
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 2 Responsibility of and for Structural (In)Justice in Arctic Governance
- Introduction
- Constructing the structure of injustice
- Embedding social inequality within the structure
- Legitimizing the structure through repetition
- Processes and consequences of structural injustice
- Responsibility for injustice
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 3 A Relational View of Responsibility for Climate Change Effects on the Territories and Communities of the Arctic
- Introduction
- A relational view of responsibility
- Situating Arctic wildfires relationally within wider landscapes of destruction
- Ocean acidification and the boundaries of responsibility
- Actualizing principles, practices and relations of co-responsibility
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 4 A JUST CSR Framework for the Arctic
- Introduction
- Which companies are 'responsible' in the Arctic?
- Why being responsible is not enough
- Energy companies and CSR in the Arctic
- The inadequacies of a 'share-/stake-holder first' approach to society.
- The ambiguity and divergence of CSR practices in the Arctic
- Lukoil strategy on CSR - efficiency and environmental best practice
- Gazprom Neft strategy on CSR - modernization, technology and health
- A JUST framework for CSR in the Arctic
- What is the JUST CSR framework?
- What are the implications of a JUST framework on a company's activities in the Arctic?
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 5 Collective Capabilities and Stranded Assets: Clearing the Path for the Energy Transition in the Arctic
- Introduction
- Background
- From practical wisdom to individual and collective capabilities
- Capabilities and energy justice
- Collective capabilities and energy justice in the Arctic oil and gas development context
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 6 Mainstreaming Environmental Justice? Right to the Landscape in Northern Sweden
- Introduction
- Justice enthusiasm
- Landscapes under pressure
- Mining as a moral duty
- It's electrifying
- Right to the forest
- Production-reproduction
- Conclusion: Mainstreaming justice
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 7 Sacrifice Zones: A Conceptual Framework for Arctic Justice Studies?
- Introduction
- Sacrifice Zones
- How is the concept used?
- Environmental impacts
- Socio-economic characteristics
- Power and interests?
- Distribution of benefits and burdens
- Activism
- Analytical value in Arctic justice studies
- Relevance for Nordic Arctic justice studies
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- References
- 8 Planning for Whose Benefit? Procedural (In)Justice in Norwegian Arctic Industry Projects
- Introduction
- Analytical framework
- Methods
- Context Finnmark
- The legal frameworks of mining and petroleum.
- Planning process and participation of rights and stakeholders in the Goliat project
- Planning process and participation of rights and stakeholders in the Nussir project
- Distributive justice and social licence to operate (SLO) in Kvalsund
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 9 The Complex Relationship between Forest Sámi and the Finnish State
- Introduction
- A historical overview of the rights of Forest Sámi in Finland
- Differences between Forest and Mountain Sámi
- Land rights of Forest Sámi in the 17th and 18th centuries
- The legal status of Finnish Forest Sámi in Finland today - rights that are not recognized
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 10 FPIC and Geoengineering in the Future of Scandinavia
- Introduction: why geoengineer the Arctic?
- Geoengineering in the Arctic and Indigenous peoples
- The significance of Sámi self-determination, consent and participation
- Geoengineering, justice and consent
- Intergenerational justice and geoengineering the ice
- Intergenerational justice and using SAI
- The free, prior and informed consent procedure within the context of geoengineering
- Conclusion: Can a more robust FPIC provide a solution?
- Study questions
- References
- 11 Overarching Issues of Justice in the Arctic: Reflections from the Case of South Greenland
- Introduction
- Historical background
- The balance of power
- External ownership and control
- Conclusion
- Study questions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 12 Seeing Like an Arctic City: The Lived Politics of Just Transition at Norway's Oil and Gas Frontier
- Introduction
- The everyday politics of social space
- 'We are building a society in Hammerfest'
- 'The north needs to have a stronger urbanization'.
- 'A stone-by-stone transition': building up from lived experience
- Conclusion: The urban politics of a 'Just Transition' - three theses
- A Just Transition is essentially practical
- The epistemological significance of experience
- The urban dimension of social praxis
- Study questions
- References
- Conclusion: Making Connections between Justice and Studies of the Arctic
- Central points and avenues for future research
- References
- Index.