Arctic conferences as arenas for power games and collaboration in international relations
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28504Dato
2022-11-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Steinveg, BeateSammendrag
International Relations (IR) considers states to be the central actors
in the international system, and IR’s main theories have been
heavily focused on great powers. While many scholars that politics
is about more than government and broadens the analytical
emphasis to also include non-state, sub-national, sub-regional
actors – conferences have attracted limited attention. Still, global
conferences do function as arenas for states, non-state, subnational and sub-regional entities to advance their interests and
position within a region or within an issue area. Conferences are
arenas for dialogue and cooperation, as well as for political games.
This article adopts a comprehensive approach to what should be
considered relevant empirical entities, and inquiries into the space
for conferences in IR-analysis. The article applies realism and neoliberalism to conceptualise conferences within established frames of
the discipline, and examine whether conferences can be instruments of statecraft, drivers of innovation, or contribute to shape
preferences and outcomes. Applying these perspectives enables
scholars to assess whether conferences have similar characteristics
to institutions, or whether they should be treated as separate
empirical entities within IR analysis. The article also questions the
state-centric view of these perspectives by asking whether including conferences in analysis of policymaking can make an empirical
contribution. Specifically, the article asks whether conferences produce outcomes that must be addressed when analysing how and
where policy, diplomacy, deal-making and cooperation occur. The
article looks specifically at the functions of conferences within
Arctic governance, and the Arctic Circle Assembly in particular.
The article accounts for the novel function conferences appear to
have taken within Arctic governance – also for small states and nonstate actors – and enquires what we can infer from this when
examining both cooperation and interests within international
relations.
Forlag
Taylor & FrancisSitering
Steinveg. Arctic conferences as arenas for power games and collaboration in international relations. The Polar Journal. 2022Metadata
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