Asia Pacific University Library catalogue


Role theory, environmental politics, and learning in international relations : the case of the Arctic region / Sandra Engstrand.

By: Engstrand, SandraMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Role theory and international relations ; volume 12Publication details: New York, NY : Routledge, 2021Description: 1 online resourceISBN: 1000393194; 9780429329999 (electronic book); 0429329997 (electronic book); 9781000393170; 1000393178; 9781000393194Subject(s): Arctic Council | Arctic Council | Diplomatic relations | Ecology | POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General | POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Environmental Policy | Arctic regions -- Environmental conditions | Arctic regions -- Foreign relations | Arctic Regions | Role theoryGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 363.7/0526 LOC classification: GE160.A68 | E54 2021ebOnline resources: Available in EBSCOhost. Log in to view full text. Summary: "In this book, Sandra Engstrand uses role theory to study learning processes in environmental policy negotiations in the Arctic Council. Due to rapid ice-melting in the Arctic region, and more accessible commercial opportunities, there is a greater need for environmental protection. However, large sections of the Arctic fall under state jurisdiction, often causing tensions to arise that prevents any cooperation from achieving fully efficient environmental protection. To enhance our understanding on how states learn about environmental norms, Engstrand examines negotiation processes on environmental protection for the prevention of Arctic marine oil spills and the reduction of short-lived climate pollutants. Through interviews with state representatives, and text analyses of nearly twenty years of meetings between Senior Arctic Officials from each of the eight Arctic states, Engstrand suggests that a learning on environmental norms runs firstly through a learning of roles in international relations. She demonstrates how member states develop through self-reflection and by considering the expectation of others, concluding that states' wishes to preserve their social role in a group, and to be perceived as Arctic 'cooperators', also are drivers for a social education on environmental norms. A timely and unmatched volume Role Theory, Environmental Politics, and Learning in International Relations will engage students and academic researchers in International Relations, Environmental Governance and Arctic Politics"--
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

"In this book, Sandra Engstrand uses role theory to study learning processes in environmental policy negotiations in the Arctic Council. Due to rapid ice-melting in the Arctic region, and more accessible commercial opportunities, there is a greater need for environmental protection. However, large sections of the Arctic fall under state jurisdiction, often causing tensions to arise that prevents any cooperation from achieving fully efficient environmental protection. To enhance our understanding on how states learn about environmental norms, Engstrand examines negotiation processes on environmental protection for the prevention of Arctic marine oil spills and the reduction of short-lived climate pollutants. Through interviews with state representatives, and text analyses of nearly twenty years of meetings between Senior Arctic Officials from each of the eight Arctic states, Engstrand suggests that a learning on environmental norms runs firstly through a learning of roles in international relations. She demonstrates how member states develop through self-reflection and by considering the expectation of others, concluding that states' wishes to preserve their social role in a group, and to be perceived as Arctic 'cooperators', also are drivers for a social education on environmental norms. A timely and unmatched volume Role Theory, Environmental Politics, and Learning in International Relations will engage students and academic researchers in International Relations, Environmental Governance and Arctic Politics"--

Sandra Engstrand has a PhD in Political Science from Lund University. She has been teaching courses in International Relations at the Department of Global Political Studies at Malm ̲University, Sweden.

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