dc.description.abstract | The Arctic region has attracted the interest of Arctic and non-Arctic states, as well as non-state
actors, for decades. Corresponding with the growing attraction towards the region, the number of
conferences attending to Arctic issues has expanded. This article provides an historical mapping
of the Arctic conference sphere, and demonstrates how the establishment of Arctic conferences
has both paralleled central events in Arctic affairs and can be linked to important international
developments. Firstly, there is a notable peak conforming with the “second state change” in 2005,
brought about by developments opening the Arctic to global concerns: the impacts of climate
change and the spread of the socio-economic effects from globalization to the Arctic. Secondly,
the expanding number of conferences around 2013 can be seen in relation to the growing interest
in the region from non-Arctic states. As such, this article builds the argument for conferences
as a central element within the Arctic governance architecture, creating linkages among units in
the regime complex. The article devotes particular attention towards the two largest international
conferences on Arctic issues – Arctic Frontiers and Arctic Circle Assembly – to illustrate how the
necessity for hybrid policy-science-business conferences arose from a more complex governance
system, and challenges requiring cross-sectoral, interdisciplinary, and international collaboration. | en_US |