Sustainable Arctic Mining? A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskning

Standard

Sustainable Arctic Mining? A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses. / Jacobsen, Marc.

The Arctic Institute; Center for Circumpolar Security Studies. 2018.

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskning

Harvard

Jacobsen, M 2018, Sustainable Arctic Mining? A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses. The Arctic Institute; Center for Circumpolar Security Studies. <https://www.thearcticinstitute.org/sustainable-arctic-mining-comparative-analysis-greenland-nunavut-mining-discourses/>

APA

Jacobsen, M. (2018, nov. 20). Sustainable Arctic Mining? A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses. The Arctic Institute; Center for Circumpolar Security Studies. https://www.thearcticinstitute.org/sustainable-arctic-mining-comparative-analysis-greenland-nunavut-mining-discourses/

Vancouver

Jacobsen M. Sustainable Arctic Mining? A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses. 2018.

Author

Jacobsen, Marc. / Sustainable Arctic Mining? A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses. 2018. The Arctic Institute; Center for Circumpolar Security Studies.

Bibtex

@misc{7c76a7740d924c9eb103f0b2e6c4aaa8,
title = "Sustainable Arctic Mining?: A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses",
abstract = "A condensed version of the book chapter 'Digging sustainability: scaling and sectoring of sovereignty in Greenland and Nunavut mining discourses'.Abstract:{\textquoteleft}Sustainability{\textquoteright} is often articulated in the Greenland and Nunavut mining discourses where the exploitation of mineral resources is perceived as a key component in their respective continuous nation-building processes. The concept is, to some degree, contested by Indigenous definitions, but the Brundtland Report{\textquoteright}s 1987 description of sustainable development is generally the main point of reference, hence reproducing the hegemonic perception. By digging deeper into key mining documents and public hearings regarding the proposed Citronen Fiord zinc mine and the Mary River iron mine, this chapter shows how the referent object is placed on different scales and sectors within the two discourses. Whereas the national economy is given precedence in Greenland in the paramount aim for independence, the local social sustainability gets more attention in the Nunavut mining discourse, which further allows more room for disagreement. This reflects the different directions of their respective postcolonial developments, where Greenland is described as a {\textquoteleft}country{\textquoteright} on the way to {\textquoteleft}independence{\textquoteright}, while Nunavut is a {\textquoteleft}territory{\textquoteright} with the declared goal of {\textquoteleft}devolution{\textquoteright}. Denmark and Canada are largely left out of the respective communication, but in the few instances they are mentioned it is clear how sovereignty is central to the question of who gets to decide what to sustain. While Nunavut loyally respects Canada{\textquoteright}s sovereignty and explicitly states that the mining projects sustain Canadian sovereignty in the North, Danish interference in the Citronen Fiord project triggers postcolonial concerns in Greenland.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Arctic, Greenland, Nunavut, mining, sustainable development, sustainability, Discourse analysis, Geopolitics, International politics",
author = "Marc Jacobsen",
year = "2018",
month = nov,
day = "20",
language = "English",
publisher = "The Arctic Institute; Center for Circumpolar Security Studies",
type = "Other",

}

RIS

TY - ICOMM

T1 - Sustainable Arctic Mining?

T2 - A Comparative Analysis of Greenland and Nunavut Mining Discourses

AU - Jacobsen, Marc

PY - 2018/11/20

Y1 - 2018/11/20

N2 - A condensed version of the book chapter 'Digging sustainability: scaling and sectoring of sovereignty in Greenland and Nunavut mining discourses'.Abstract:‘Sustainability’ is often articulated in the Greenland and Nunavut mining discourses where the exploitation of mineral resources is perceived as a key component in their respective continuous nation-building processes. The concept is, to some degree, contested by Indigenous definitions, but the Brundtland Report’s 1987 description of sustainable development is generally the main point of reference, hence reproducing the hegemonic perception. By digging deeper into key mining documents and public hearings regarding the proposed Citronen Fiord zinc mine and the Mary River iron mine, this chapter shows how the referent object is placed on different scales and sectors within the two discourses. Whereas the national economy is given precedence in Greenland in the paramount aim for independence, the local social sustainability gets more attention in the Nunavut mining discourse, which further allows more room for disagreement. This reflects the different directions of their respective postcolonial developments, where Greenland is described as a ‘country’ on the way to ‘independence’, while Nunavut is a ‘territory’ with the declared goal of ‘devolution’. Denmark and Canada are largely left out of the respective communication, but in the few instances they are mentioned it is clear how sovereignty is central to the question of who gets to decide what to sustain. While Nunavut loyally respects Canada’s sovereignty and explicitly states that the mining projects sustain Canadian sovereignty in the North, Danish interference in the Citronen Fiord project triggers postcolonial concerns in Greenland.

AB - A condensed version of the book chapter 'Digging sustainability: scaling and sectoring of sovereignty in Greenland and Nunavut mining discourses'.Abstract:‘Sustainability’ is often articulated in the Greenland and Nunavut mining discourses where the exploitation of mineral resources is perceived as a key component in their respective continuous nation-building processes. The concept is, to some degree, contested by Indigenous definitions, but the Brundtland Report’s 1987 description of sustainable development is generally the main point of reference, hence reproducing the hegemonic perception. By digging deeper into key mining documents and public hearings regarding the proposed Citronen Fiord zinc mine and the Mary River iron mine, this chapter shows how the referent object is placed on different scales and sectors within the two discourses. Whereas the national economy is given precedence in Greenland in the paramount aim for independence, the local social sustainability gets more attention in the Nunavut mining discourse, which further allows more room for disagreement. This reflects the different directions of their respective postcolonial developments, where Greenland is described as a ‘country’ on the way to ‘independence’, while Nunavut is a ‘territory’ with the declared goal of ‘devolution’. Denmark and Canada are largely left out of the respective communication, but in the few instances they are mentioned it is clear how sovereignty is central to the question of who gets to decide what to sustain. While Nunavut loyally respects Canada’s sovereignty and explicitly states that the mining projects sustain Canadian sovereignty in the North, Danish interference in the Citronen Fiord project triggers postcolonial concerns in Greenland.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Arctic

KW - Greenland

KW - Nunavut

KW - mining

KW - sustainable development

KW - sustainability

KW - Discourse analysis

KW - Geopolitics

KW - International politics

M3 - Net publication - Internet publication

PB - The Arctic Institute; Center for Circumpolar Security Studies

ER -

ID: 209093269