International Cooperation on Search and Rescue in the Arctic
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11729Dato
2017-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
SAR in the Arctic is a complex and dynamic cross-disciplinary activity that requires the combined
effort of multiple actors with specialized human and technical resources. Due to limited resources
and infrastructure in the Arctic, international cooperation is particularly important. This article
applies a conceptual framework drawn from regime-theory to study SAR cooperation in the Arctic.
More specifically, we apply the three dimensions of regime effectiveness (outputs, outcomes
and impacts) to examine the regimes established by the 2011 Arctic SAR Agreement and the
1995 Barents SAR Agreement. The study addresses the rights and duties established by the regimes
and their institutional arrangements for cooperation. Further, it investigates the importance
of operational cooperation among response agencies in understanding the development and
effectiveness of the regimes. The study concludes that the Arctic SAR regime is still under
implementation. The agreement has entered into force but a series of steps needs to be taken for the
common SAR system to be operative. Consequently, the regime is in the early stages of
development and any evaluations of its impact are premature. The parties have implemented the
Barents SAR regime both formally and in practice. Though the regime is generally held to have a
positive effect on cooperation between the parties, there is a range of challenges that raise questions
regarding its capacity to provide for a coordinated and effective joint SAR operation. The study
further concludes that treating regime effectiveness in terms of a causal link between output,
outcome and impact should be done with caution. It also argues that the focus of regime theory on
interest-based decision-making among regime parties should be supplemented by investigating the
operative and informal aspects of cooperation.
Beskrivelse
Source at https://doi.org/10.23865/arctic.v8.705