Divided Arctic in a Divided World Order
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36398Date
2025Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Bertelsen, Rasmus GjedssøAbstract
US unipolarity and hegemony is slipping away to world order characteristics of continued US unipolarity and hegemony, Sino-American bipolarity in economics and S&T, and multipolarity illustrated by BRICS+. Sino-US competition and US-Russia conflict to the extent of proxywar in Ukraine reflect these changes. The Arctic, which is de facto divided between the US-led NATO-Arctic and the Russian Arctic, where Russia reaches out to the BRICS+ in diplomacy, economics, and S&T, reflect these changes to world order.
There is wishful thinking in the West of returning to post-Cold War US unipolar and hegemonic “liberal world order” or “rules-based order” and the circumpolar liberal Arctic order with it. This wish is probably unrealistic for global trends in demography, economics, S&T, legitimacy, etc. Significant conflict can be expected between the US/West and China and Russia on developments in world order, with the Global South standing by. The Arctic is likely to remain divided between the US-led NATO Arctic and the Russian Arctic seeking engagement with the BRICS+ world for the future with extremely limited cooperation and risk of spill-over from the Ukraine War and other US-Russia-China conflicts.