“Moving Forward: Strengthening cooperation in Today’s Barents Region,”
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24925Date
2015Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Espiritu, Aileen AseronAbstract
When the 1993 Kirkenes Declaration was ratified, the governments of Russia, Finland,
Sweden, and Norway “expressed their conviction that expanded co-operation in the
Barents Euro-Arctic Region (BEAR) will contribute substantially to stability and progress in the area and in Europe as a whole.” (Kirkenes Declaration 1993). Over 20 years
later, and as we move forward, this goal is even more important and urgent as Europe
and Russia find themselves on opposite sides of a geopolitical conflict in Russia’s southern borders with Ukraine. Economic sanctions employed by both sides have placed a
significant halt to the trading and economic exchange between Russia and the rest of
the Barents Region – the Northern municipalities of Norway, Finland, and Sweden.
These have had significant impact on small and large communities that have relied on
the economic, social, and cultural interrelationship across the Schengen-Russia border
zones.
Description
Source: http://www.barentsinfo.org/barentsstudies/English/Issues/2015-vol1-3
Publisher
University of LaplandCitation
Espiritu AA. “Moving Forward: Strengthening cooperation in Today’s Barents Region,”. Barents Studies. 2015;1(3):7-11Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2015 The Author(s)