Reviews, Citations & Projects
Reviews of My Books
Breaking the Ice: From Land Claims to Tribal Sovereignty in the Arctic (Lexington Books, 2008)
• Professor Barry M. Gough, Wilfrid Laurier University, Choice Reviews Online, February 2009. Recommended: Graduate students, faculty, professionals. “This history of the Alaskan and Canadian arctic breaks new ground with its contemporary narration and analysis of the past three decades of political developments and with its rich findings based on documentary and Web research. Not a work in comparative history, this is more of a parallel treatment of government actions in regard to the norths of the two countries and the responses of the indigenous peoples ... to develop Native self-sufficiency and to solve the persistent problems of land claims by various First Nations, including Inuit, Inuvialuit, and Gwich'in. This large account will guide future researchers and government agents.”
• Shelagh D. Grant, Polar Imperative: A History of Arctic Sovereignty in North America (Douglas & McIntyre, 2010): "A detailed narrative of Inuit and northern Amerindians' struggle for control over their traditional lands and rights to self-government in Alaska and northern Canada."
• Mary Guss, University of Arizona (UA) NativeNet, "The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: Bibliography."
On Thin Ice: The Inuit, the State, and the Challenge of Arctic Sovereignty (Lexington Books, 2009)
• Matt Wiseman, "MattWiseman.ca," Department of History, Wilfrid Laurier University, May 31, 2013: "In arguing that history has not served the interests of Arctic peoples especially well, Barry Zellen’s On Thin Ice (2009) addresses contemporary Indigenous relations with academic integrity. Zellen’s examination focuses on Inuit peoples throughout the Arctic, and although it is not restricted to the Canadian North, it addresses issues of land claims and self-government specifically related to Canada’s past. ... On Thin Ice is a thorough examination of current issues facing both Canada’s federal government and the regions Indigenous populations. On Thin Ice is a broad synthesis that examines the current historiography of Indigenous relations in the Arctic."
• Ted L. McDorman, “From the Desk of the Editor-in-Chief,” Ocean Development & International Law 42, No. 3 (August 2011), 280-287: "This is a book about the politics, both domestic and regional, of the awakening of global interest in the Arctic ... a useful book for context."
• Martin Edwin Andersen, "A Must Read from the Troubador of the Land of the Midnight Sun," Amazon Reader Review, February 24, 2010: "5 Stars Out of 5. In On Thin Ice, Barry Scott Zellen poses tough questions about Canada's claims to a vast swathe of the soon-to-be hotly contested resource-rich Arctic. Zellen not only shows how much these depend on whether a collaborative and interdependent relationship can be successfully forged with Native peoples struggling to preserve fragile ecosystems and their own ethnic identity, but how conceptions of human security, tribal security and national security are inexorably tied together. Zellen's keen insight and painstaking research suggests that truths from the land of the midnight sun might help to illuminate and guide the struggles of indigenous peoples around the globe. On Thin Ice is a "must read" for the 21st century."
• Sarah Kate Milne, "Security on Ice: The Historical Transformation of Regional Security and International Society in the Arctic from the Cold War to the Twenty-First Century," Doctoral Thesis, Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Limerick, August 15, 2020, https://hdl.handle.net/10344/9525: "Although conflict-laden scenarios for the Arctic in the near-future need to be considered and addressed, not least for how to avoid them: the problem is that there have been too few attempts to critically and conceptually analyse these papers. Furthermore, they should be assessed utilizing realist theories of IR which many of the arguments are implicitly based on yet often defy the inherent logic which such theories are based on. What also seems to be forgotten is that there are various forms of realism and understandings of important concepts such as the balance of power within the realist tradition, yet these differences are rarely engaged with individually in the literature. Barry Scott Zellen’s (2009) On Thin Ice is one exception to the lack of Arctic texts written through an explicit realist theory of International Relations. Zellen utilizes Kenneth Waltz’s three levels of analysis (the individual, the state, and the international system) with the addition of a new "Fourth Image" to describe a tribal level. Zellen’s (2009) study reveals that instead of the Arctic being perceived as a passive receptor of external changes at the international level (third image), he demonstrates how, during the crucial post-Cold War transition of the 1990s, “national policies increasingly reflected the aspirations of the peoples of the North". Zellen’s adaptation of Waltz’s neo-realist level of analysis theory is useful for simultaneously examining top-down and bottom-up processes of a single event occurring at a given time."
Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic (Praeger, 2009)
• In great company (again!) In his chapter "Saltwater Geopolitics in North America" in the newly published volume, Widening the Scope of Environmental Policies in North America: Toward Blue Approaches (Palgrave MacMillan, 2017), Ed Atkins cites my 2009 work on Arctic geopolitics, Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom alongside such luminaries as Carter-administration diplomat and National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski; Obama-administration Secretary of State (and almost-President), Hillary Clinton; the legendary Arctic expert and kind-hearted advocate of Inuit rights, Terry Fenge; the Hegelian End-of-Historian and G.W. Bush-era member of the Policy Planning Staff of the U.S. State Department and long-time RANDite, Francis Fukuyama; former Prime Minister of Canada, Stephen Harper; pioneering Canadian peace researcher and environmental security theorist, Tad Homer-Dixon; the legendary and prolific strategic thinkers and writers, Robert D. Kaplan and Michael T. Klare; the pivotal and pioneering theorist of geopolitics, Halford J. Mackinder; the equally pivotal and pioneering naval strategist, theorist and admiral, Alfred T. Mahan; the widely-acclaimed offensive-realist theorist, John D. Mearsheimer; and the soft-power apostle and one-time Harvard University Nuclear Study (HUNS) Group member (and innovator of the "crystal ball effect" of nuclear weapons), Joseph Nye! In such august company, the only words that come to mind are, as the late John Belushi once eloquently put it: "Holy shit!" It's always such a great privilege (and greater surprise) to find out who I'm sitting near in the footnote and endnote sections of various books, chapters and articles - almost always by people I've never met but who I nonetheless want to personally thank: Thank you professor Atkins!
• Selected for "Special Focus: Good Winter Reads," Seniors Connect, Cleveland Public Library, 2012.
• Svein Vigeland Rottem, “Review of Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic,” Polar Record (December 2010): “Timely and intriguing. ... Zellen aims high and touches upon a wide range of highly interesting approaches on how to grasp and analyse the challenges and opportunities in the region. One could argue that this leads to a lack of analytical depth, but at the same time this wide scope offers its audience easy access, insight and plenty of food for thought into a wide range of pressing topics within the area of post cold war international relations. The book is a central contribution to the debate on the future of the Arctic.”
• Ken Atkinson, “Review of Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic,” British Journal of Canadian Studies, Volume 23, Number 2 (November 2010), 324: “The strength of the book lies in its treatment of the surge of activities by the circumpolar states in the 2000s in response to the predicted decline in sea-ice coverage. For example, the need for information on the position of the continental shelf has resulted in the present race by states to map the Arctic oceanbed, in a search for evidence to put before the International Seabed Authority (ISA) under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). This explains the recently updated Arctic policies of Canada and the US, and Russia’s dramatic flag-planting escapades at the North Pole in 2007. On these issues the book is commendably up-todate, and we are provided with over 50 pages of endnotes and bibliography (including many websites) for further reference.”
• Justin Klugh, “Book Review Wednesday: Books for the Cold at Heart,” The Green Life (Sierra Club), September 22, 2010: “The authors challenge some specific perspectives; most notably, yours. Should you be one of the many who don't live in Alaska, the frozen north is just that, and not much else. But for those who reside there, it's their neighborhood, their livelihood, and their home. A scientific look at just where global warming is going to leave us adds a foreboding sense of introspection for more than just those standing on the doorstep of climate change.”
• Kelley Crawford, Security and Defense Studies Review, Spring-Summer 2010: “Zellen deserves credit for providing another perspective on the Arctic’s situation where most of the literature is only concerned with the negative impacts of climate change.”
• Professor Stephanie Irlbacher-Fox, University of Toronto, Journal of the ARCTIC, Volume 63, Issue 2, June 2010: “Zellen has written a book that will make us think, and for that, his contribution should be lauded and welcomed as a source of important discussion among students and scholars of northern studies and northern policy makers alike.”
• Roger G. Barry, Distinguished Professor of Geography, Scientist, National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, Journal of Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, February 2010: “a timely and topical book… useful to residents of the north and scientists who work there, policy makers, and businesses with Arctic activities.”
• SciTech Book News (December 2009)
• Foreign Policy Association Editor's Pick (October 2009)
• Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the Environment (GNHRE), Virtual Research Repository, Theoretical and Conceptual Issues, Ecology: Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic (B.S. Zellen).
The Realist Tradition in International Relations: Foundations of Western Order, 4 Volumes (Praeger, 2011)
• SciTech Book News (December 2011): “Zellen (Naval Postgraduate School) has had an energetic passion for international relations theory for several decades, with a focus on Arctic security and circumpolar politics. Ambassador David T. Killion (US Ambassador to UNESCO) provides an introduction to this four-volume work, beginning with a reminiscence of his first course with Zellen at Wesleyan University in 1986, which included 'a veritable who's who of realism from the classical era up to the 20th century....' The foreword by Joel M. Ostrow (political science, Benedictine U.) points out that this treatise, for many, is long awaited. Ostrow explains that Zellen '...offers unique insights into the entire concept of the nation-state.' He continues, advising that reading this work '...is a massive journey...not for the faint of heart' and suggesting that students of international relations theory will be most interested in Zellen's development of constructive realism theory historically, philosophically, and politically. Zellen discusses the rise of the modern nation-state, explores (Ostrow's words) the 'application and misapplication of the ideas [of constructive realism],' and 'chronicles strategic thought during the age of total war' and reactions against the nation-state (as evidenced by the attacks of 9/11). The four volumes each have a focus and are titled as follows: v.1: State of Hope, v.2: State of Fear,, v.3: State of Awe, and v.4: State of Siege. Each volume is separately indexed.”
• Goodreads (December 2012): "Rated: 4 of 5 stars. Heavy reading. Zellen has a writing style that strikes a balance between scholar and poet as he traces Realism from Thucydides to Hitler. This first book in his four volume series is extremely informative, but excessively, unnecessarily wordy. It is also highly repetitive ..."
State of Doom: Bernard Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (Continuum Books, 2011)
• "Brodie and War" by Dr. B.A. Clayton, Amazon UK, May 29, 2012: "An excellent account of Bernard Brodie's writings and thinking. Brodie was an eminent expert on military and political strategy. He was one of the first to interpret the significance of nuclear weapons, and later to formulate the theory of limited nuclear war. His writings on Clausewitz are very useful for the student. Like the Prussian he emphasized the need for war to have a reasonable objective. For Brodie the question that Marshal Foch used to ask: 'De quoi s'agit-il' is crucial. It is a great pity that our politicians did not consider it before entering on the fiascoes in Iraq and Afghanistan. I met Bernard Brodie several times at IISS Conferences. He was a very humane and charming man." 5.0 out of 5 stars.
• Strategy & Defence Planning: Meeting the challenge of uncertainty, by Colin S. Gray (Oxford University Press 2014), p104, n25: "This professional challenge was well flagged and discussed in Bernard Brodie, War and Politics (New York: Macmillan, 1973), ch. 10. Three first-rate studies help explain Brodie’s professional position, located as he was between and among history, social science, and physical science. See Ken Booth, ‘Bernard Brodie’, in John Baylis and John Garnett, eds., Makers of Nuclear Strategy (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991), 19–54; Barry H. Steiner, Bernard Brodie and the Foundations of American Nuclear Strategy (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1991); and Barry Scott Zellen, State of Doom: Bernard Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (New York: Continuum, 2012)."
Also cited on p105, n33, and p190, n33: "Notwithstanding its title and argument in praise of economics as a science, there is little in Bernard Brodie’s brilliant 1949 argument in ‘Strategy as a science’ ... with which I disagree. Brodie’s argument, as it were from the ‘Stone Age’ of defence analysis in the late 1940s, needs to be read in the light of the argument in his last major work, War and Politics, esp. ch. 10. Barry Scott Zellen, State of Doom: Beyond Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (New York: Continuum, 2012), is essential."
• Theory of Strategy, by Colin S. Gray (Oxford University Press, 2018), p5, n11: "The nature and apparently tolerable character of our nuclear armed condition was explained in a flow of books, articles, and studies in the late 1950s and 1960s. It would appear to be the case that just about everything that needed to be understood about nuclear dangers in statecraft was expressed at that time. However, the fundamentals of nuclear deterrence probably do need to be repeated loudly for new generations. The wisest of the wise among the first generation of nuclear-weapon theorists was undoubtedlty Bernard Brodie. See, particularly, his final book, <i>War and Politics</i> (New York: Macmillan, 1973). It is worth noting that Brodie attracted two fine, detailed biographies: Barry H. Steiner, Bernard Brodie and the Foundations of American Nuclear Strategy (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1991) and Barry Scott Zellen, State of Doom: Bernard Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (New York: Continuum, 2012)."
• The Clausewitz Home Page, Clausewitz Bookstore: New Releases on Clausewitz.
The Art of War in an Asymmetric World: Strategy for the Post-Cold War Era (Continuum Books, 2012):
• In great company - excerpts from The Art of War in an Asymmetric World were cited in Telos’ online journal, Teloscope – right after Sir Thomas Hobbes himself, three quotes before Kissinger, and seven before Carl Schmitt (three of my all-time favorite realists)! As Andrew M. Wender writes:
A more encompassing historical and geographic, and for that matter, metaphysical perspective might suggest that, in fact, ours is a fundamentally "asymmetric world," wherein struggle over such intimate forms of human identity as those that Barry Scott Zellen terms "tribal" and "ethereal" is much the norm. As Zellen asserts: "... modern states are neither eternal nor unchanging. They are dynamic and evolving. ... Indeed, across much of the world, there may truly be no state system at all, despite its prominence in the minds of theorists dating back so many centuries -- but instead, in its lofty place, is an ethereal but nonetheless lasting interconnection that varies greatly by region, shadows cast upon the wall of mind deep inside Plato's cave -- mere glimpses of an overarching order, amidst a kaleidoscopic amalgam of organic and synthetic parts, each doing what they do best, surviving in a maddeningly complex world -- for as long as they can."
A vital question, therefore, is how the political might be understood as animated and inspired by the theological, in ways that are justly reflective of the asymmetrical contours and contestations of human difference; this, as supposed to the artificial superimposition of violent, ostensibly symmetrical order.
Check out Andrew M. Wender’s “Asymmetry and the Reimagining of Political Theology,” Teloscope (March 8, 2017), at: http://www.telospress.com/asymmetry-and-the-reimagining-of…/
• The LSE School of Economics and Political Science Blog, August 18, 2013: "Barry Scott Zellen explores how the U.S. has had to adapt to the new asymmetrical world of conflict that followed the end of the Cold War and that culminates with today’s global jihadist movements. Featuring the works of key theorists such as John Arquilla, Thomas P.M. Barnett, Arthur K. Cebrowski, and David Ronfeldt, this book is to be recommended to students of strategic studies willing to bear with this dense study from beginning to end, writes Andrew McCracken: 'The Art of War in an Asymmetric World – or AWAW, to use the sort of acronym so beloved of the armed forces – is both a history of military planning in the US over the past few decades and a prescription aimed at what the author considers to be its flaws. Barry Scott Zellen writes: “indigenous tribes and the most modern of states are waging a new and very asymmetric kind of conflict, one that is redefining the very building blocks of world order.” In AWAW, Zellen synthesises the academic discourse surrounding America’s military strategy over the past few decades. Inevitably for such a study, the war on terror looms large throughout; subject of the book’s central chapter, the conflict also informs the entirety of AWAW. ... The work itself is an esoteric tome unlikely to appeal to readers unfamiliar with the field. Typically for strategic studies, familiarity with the works of Sun Tzu, Clausewitz and lesser theorists, in addition to a grounding in how the war on terror has unfolded, is taken as a given. Indubitably, this is not Contemporary Warfare for Dummies.'"
Read more: here.
State of Recovery: The Quest to Restore American Security After 9/11 (Bloomsbury 2013):
• Book Review of State of Recovery in Journal of Terrorism Research (JTR), Volume 5, Issue 2 (May 2014), p59-61. Reviewed by Richard English, Wardlaw Professor of Politics in the School of International Relations, and Director of the Handa Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence (CSTPV), at the University of St Andrews:
"‘Technology to the Rescue.’ Barry Scott Zellen’s intriguing and impressive new book examines the deployment of technological innovation by the United States, as it has attempted to ensure its security from threat after the atrocity of 9/11. In the words of Zellen’s own manifesto here: ‘State of Recovery examines the numerous efforts by technologists and homeland security policy makers dedicated to restoring security and ameliorating the insecurity felt after the attacks more than a decade ago.’ It is a fascinating account. The author considers the dramatic US rise in technology spending, both public and private, since 2001; he assesses the remarkable innovation evident in recent years in biometrics, in information security, and in protection regarding aviation, underground travel, sporting events, food, and the mail system, as well as the reorganization (with the Department of Homeland Security and so forth) of US structures of prevention; he ranges widely over non-terrorist dangers, such as those posed by hostile states (North Korea, Iran), by illegal migration into America, and by increasing border violence. Zellen is an admirably prolific and highly intelligent scholar. Here, he recognizes that some measure of insecurity and threat will prove residual. And some very good points are made. One of the repeatedly important lessons which emerges from this thoughtful book is the constant need for ensuring intra- and inter-state coordination, cooperation, and partnerships (together with organizational streamlining). Regrettably, it is an insight more easily stated than it is adhered to in effective manner. No book is flawless. Zellen does not sustainedly explore the degree to which some of the USA’s main counter- terrorist efforts in recent years (especially in relation to Iraq) have actually generated more intense kinds of terrorist threat than had previously existed. Relatedly, he is better on the innovative technological brilliance involved in, for example, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles than he is in considering the possible blowback costs which the USA and its allies are likely to have to pay for drones’ lethal use. Here, as so often, there can be a seeming disjunction between the extraordinarily high levels of technical and technological sophistication shown by counter-terrorist states, and the sometimes crass naivety of states’ political and social approaches to the causation and likely dynamics of enduring conflict. Zellen has interviewed some fascinating people involved in the world which he delineates. At times, I felt that he might have interrogated their assumptions and claims rather more stringently than he does, in light of other–corroborating or sceptical–sources. So the chapter on nuclear terrorism might perhaps be justified in its somewhat anxious tone; but this would have seemed more persuasive to me had Zellen engaged with the less alarmist arguments of scholars such as Michael Levi (which he does not). One of the things that Zellen suggests is that ‘both the terrorists as well as those who fight them are finding that the internet has become a theatre of war unto itself ’. …"
Read the full review: here.
• Book Review of State of Recovery in British Association for American Studies' U.S. Studies Online Forum for New Writing. Reviewed by Dafydd Townley, September 2, 2015.
The terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre on September 11th 2001 was a watershed moment in national security in the United States. ... The Bush Administration’s reaction was the formation of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in January 2003 with a budget of $29.4 billion as part of a massive federal government reshuffle. This led to what Barry Scott Zellen describes as ‘an unprecedented surge in governmental investment in new technologies for homeland security.’(9) It is this government investment in the technology industry and the industry’s subsequent impact on the maintenance of national security that is the subject of Zellen’s publication. State of Recovery highlights in particular where government-led initiatives to secure the United States’ borders were influenced by corporate innovation through governmental funding and by developments within the consumer market since the Twin Towers attack. This is exemplified by the increase in efficiency and speed of development of consumer items such as mobile phones and tablets. As the war on terror became more technological, the military demand for greater technological advances became exponential, as did the funding. The increasing use of technology by both the US government and armed forces, and terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda, leads Zellen to declare that ‘the internet has become a theatre of war unto itself.’(P24)
The book comprises of a number of essays written by Zellen which deal with the developments and innovation within information technology after the attacks on the World Trade Centre in 2001. It addresses the issues faced by the US government after 9/11 to ensure the safety of the general public against terrorist attacks, and examines the attempts made by the US to make sure that any future hostilities occur as far away as possible from the US mainland. This is an impressive piece of scholarship by a recognised authority in his field. Zellen asserts that any successful national security program has to be as a result of successful partnerships, and it is a theory that is developed and supported by a wealth of information. The co-operation of government departments and technological corporations is illustrated throughout. The transformation of protection against online identity fraud is an example of this: already being developed by online security firms prior to 9/11, the necessity of restricting terrorist movement post 9/11 led to massive funding from the US government into the venture as part of the DHS’s Real ID Program. The program, part of the Real ID Act was an effort, says Zellen, to close the ‘revolving door to terror’. (33) It is Zellen’s examination of such juxtapositions that make this monograph such a unique and important contribution to the study of national security. ... State of Recovery is a remarkable piece of scholarship that fills a gap within the study of national security. It does not examine in detail the events or politics that led to the creation of the Bush Doctrine in the Post /11 era, rather it examines the role that information technology had in helping the Bush and Obama administrations realize their foreign policy, in particular its role in the Global War On Terror. It is an excellent supplement to more conventional national security studies, in particular highlighting the effect of the partnership between the federal government and technological corporations had on foreign policy, and the subsequent collateral effect on the consumer technological market.
Read the full review: here
The Fast-Changing Arctic: Rethinking Arctic Security for a Warmer World (University of Calgary Press, 2013):
• Betty Galbraith, Science Librarian and Instruction Coordinator, Washington State University in Northeastern Naturalist, Vol. 20, Issue 4, B10 (December 2013):
"Many have heard about the plight of the polar bear due to the shrinking of sea ice, but few have considered the other repercussions of global warming and the melting of sea ice in the Arctic. Luckily, circumpolar Arctic organizations, governments, and peoples have been considering this for many years. This book is a collection of essays on just these topics: sovereignty, strategic defense, national and environmental security, and global economics. Some of these essays consider the probable rush to grab territories, and to exploit new transportation routes and newly accessible natural resources. For example, a Russian flag was planted on the seabed of the North Pole in 2007. Corporations and countries are already positioning themselves to exploit oil and gas reserves currently under Arctic ice. This raises several questions: How can the Arctic nations peacefully manage these conflicting demands? What about the demands of non-Arctic nations that want a part of the spoils? Who will have the right to create and enforce environmental standards and rules? How will indigenous peoples fare? This is an excellent collection of essays from knowledgeable people. It is a must for anyone interested in geopolitics, international relations, and northern studies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels."
BioOne members may read the entire review here.
• Kristian Atand, of the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment, in The Journal of Polar Research (Vol 33, Feb 2014):
"How will the changes currently taking place in the Arctic affect the future nature of interstate relations in the region? To what extent, and how, will the decline in summer and winter sea ice in the Polar Basin lead to changes in the pattern of human activity in the Arctic? How do the Arctic states approach the region and each other, and to what extent are their Arctic strategies compatible? Will the Arctic become an arena of jurisdictional disputes and heightened military tension, or will it become a region of cooperation and prosperity? These are among the core questions addressed in The Fast-Changing Arctic: rethinking security for a warmer world, edited by Barry Scott Zellen. ... Zellen is a senior fellow at the Institute of the North, Alaska, where he directs the Fast-Changing Arctic project, which focuses on the geopolitical and other impacts of changes taking place in the circumpolar Arctic. Having worked on related issues since the end of the Cold War, as a journalist, editor and researcher, he has established himself as a prolific writer on Arctic and northern affairs. He is the author or editor of about 10 books and has several more on the way. ... The current book, which is a 400-page anthology featuring contributions by 20 authors, revisits many of the issues that were raised in Zellen’s monograph, Arctic doom, Arctic boom: the geopolitics of climate change in the Arctic, published in 2009. At the same time, the current book widens the perspective and adds new dimensions to the analysis. Overall, it makes for an enjoyable read. The 16 chapters of this book are organized into three main parts, “Arctic climate change: strategic challenges and opportunities”, “cooperation and conflict: paths forward” and “regional perspectives”. The book also includes a brief foreword by Alaska’s Lieutenant Governor, Mead Treadwell, a concluding chapter by the editor (“Stability and security in a post-Arctic world: towards a convergence of indigenous, state, and global interests at the top of the world”) and an eight-page afterword by University of Alaska professor, Lawson Brigham. ... Zellen has done a great job in assembling the contributions and presenting them for a wider audience in the form of a highly accessible anthology. The book is well structured, most of the relevant topics and perspectives are represented, and all of the chapters add to our understanding of the increasingly complex dynamics at play in the northern part of the globe."
Read more: here.
• Mike Cowton, in the February 25, 2014 edition of Eco Travel Guide, online at: http://www.ecotravelguide.eu/fast-changing-arctic/
REVIEW: THE FAST-CHANGING ARCTIC: Rethinking Arctic Security for a Warmer World, edited by Barry Scott Zellen (University of Calgary Press):
"Sought by explorers for centuries as a possible trade route, the Northwest Passage sea route traverses the Arctic Ocean, following the northern coast of North America via waterways amidst the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. and connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. First navigated by Roald Amundsen in 1903–1906, up until 2009, the Arctic pack ice prevented regular marine shipping throughout much of the year. However, climate change has reduced the pack ice, with summer Arctic sea-ice coverage shrinking by over a third in the past three decades. This shrinkage has seen the waterways becoming more navigable. That said, contested sovereignty claims over the waters have complicated shipping through the region. In his foreword, ‘Witnessing an Arctic Renaissance’, Mead Treadwell, Lieutenant Governor, State of Alaska, writes that ‘for Arctic states across the globe, the accessible Arctic Ocean presents opportunities of a lifetime, with energy resources, minerals, tourism and shipping potential making this increasingly accessible region a classic emerging market’. The planting of a Russian flag on the Arctic sea-bed beneath the North Pole in August 2007 is symbolic of the high stakes involved as the Arctic opens up to oil and gas exploration, shipping, tourism and increased human habitation. Much has been written on the climatological and ecological stresses on the region, with little addressed on the military, defence, strategic and macro-economic opportunities associated with polar thaw. Here, international scholars and military professionals explore the strategic consequences of sea-ice decline. Timely reading indeed, on sovereignty and territorial disputes, oil and gas exploration, fishing, coastguard responsibilities and Arctic tourism."
Read more here.
• Valur Ingimundarson, of the University of Iceland, "Geostrategic Visions for the Arctic," in the March 2014 edition of H-Net's (Humanities and Social Sciences Online's) H-Diplo, online at: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=40301
"... Edited by Barry Scott Zellen, who has written extensively on Arctic geopolitics, The Fast Changing Arctic contains contributions from established and junior scholars as well as military and coast guard professionals ... together, they deal with a wide array of Arctic topics, such as military and defense, governance and regional management, Arctic strategies, environmental politics, maritime and shipping developments, and sovereignty and legal concerns. ... Zellen analyzes the U.S. military regional commands in Arctic areas, that is, the Northern Command (NORTHCOM), Pacific Command (PACOM), and European Command (EUCOM) areas. He asserts that EUCOM should, in the future, be responsible for Arctic defense since the potential threat does not emanate from China, whose interests in the region are largely economic in nature, but from Russia. As he puts it: “Proximity to an awakening Russian bear, and experience in taming its more aggressive instincts, will be an important key to a secure and peaceful North” (p. 244). An important part of such Western regional defenses--he maintains--has historically been through close ties to Greenland and Iceland. ... In his treatment of future Arctic developments, Zellen conjures Cold War utopian and dystopian visions for the Arctic. He argues that an “Arctic Spring” has the potential to transform the Arctic Basin “much like the Prague Spring promised to open up and integrate Czechoslovakia with the West” (p. 343). The hope it expressed, he continues--while temporarily crushed in 1968--was realized with the Velvet Revolution of 1989. In addition, he stresses the empowerment of Arctic indigenous peoples and sees an independent Greenland as a real possibility. In fact, the editor--who is steeped in a realist tradition--is the only contributor prepared to project Manichean Cold War schemes onto the Arctic in his assessment of future strategic developments. Sometimes, he goes way too far in his analogies--the discourse on the “Arctic Spring” and the “Prague Spring” is a case in point. But he is also willing to contemplate other cooperative scenarios and transformative and empowering possibilities for the Arctic indigenous peoples. Thus, despite the hyperbolic language, the Arctic is, in the end, not seen as a geostrategic fixture, as was the case during the Cold War, but as a region open to different interpretations and outcomes, including emancipatory potentials."
Read the whole review here.
• Nikolas Sellheim, Faculty of Law, University of Lapland, Review of The Fast-Changing Arctic in Polar Record, published on 13 March 2014 by Cambridge University Press:
"The warming trends in the Arctic have been widely documented and seem to have found rather unison acceptance among climate scientists. Secondary effects of this trend are reflected in the political developments in the region, albeit with differences in interpretation as to which path political developments will tread: conflict or cooperation? It is thus a matter of ‘security’ in the region which must be related to climate change. And this is what The Fast-changing Arctic – rethinking Arctic security for a warmer world tries to achieve. The book is subdivided into four sections, ‘Arctic climate change: strategic challenges and opportunities’, ‘Cooperation and conflict: paths forward’, ‘Regional perspectives’, and ‘Concluding observations’. ... there are several contributions in this volume which justify the ‘rethinking’-element of the book. ... It is thus to conclude that The Fast-changing Arctic provides many new perspectives on a traditional understanding of Arctic security with a dominant state-centred, North American focus."
Read the review here.
• John D. Jacobs, Honorary Research Professor, Department of Geography, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, in the Journal of Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (May 2014):
"The Fast-Changing Arctic is more about the geopolitics of the Arctic than the rapidly evolving environmental changes taking place there. However, anyone who does research in the Arctic must be sensitive to the politics at some level and will be interested in policy matters that can be informed by science and ultimately will affect the future state of the Arctic environment. This book is a collection of 16 substantive chapters arranged under the headings Arctic climate change: strategic challenges and opportunities, Cooperation and conflict: paths forward, Regional perspectives, and Concluding remarks. The 17 authors encompass a range of relevant experience and expertise, and include academics, military and diplomatic professionals, and journalists. None appear to be from indigenous Arctic communities, although several of the chapters deal with emerging indigenous governance and power-sharing issues, particularly in Alaska, Canada, and Greenland. There are extensive notes and references, numerous maps and other figures, a comprehensive index, and information about the contributing authors. Most of the chapters have appeared previously as articles in foreign policy and international law journals dating between 2009 and 2011, but they provide good background to things to come. Arctic warming and associated diminishing sea ice and other physical and ecological effects are sketched in several chapters, with reference to model projections for future change. That the decline in seasonal sea-ice extent has outpaced most model projections is noted and becomes a source of some urgency, as in Alun Anderson’s statement, “action to look after the Arctic must accelerate too.” ....The Fast-Changing Arctic is a comprehensive treatment of current Arctic policy issues by authors with diverse backgrounds and perspectives. While the book lacks some of the continuity of a focused work by a single author, the editor has succeeded in organizing the various contributions into a coherent whole. This book joins a growing literature on politics, resource development, and environmental issues in the Arctic, and should be of interest to anyone who has an interest in the future of the region."
Read the full review: here
• Miloš Barták, "Review of The fast-changing Arctic. Rethinking Arctic security for a warmer world, Barry Scott Zellen (ed.)," Czech Polar Reports: An Interdisciplinary Journal 4, No. 1 (2014), Masaryk University, Brno.
"A general feature of the book is that it brings a pragmatic view on the consequences of the global warming of the atmosphere, and the sea ice decline in the northern hemisphere in particular. In contrast to many books on the market that focus on recent climatological and environmental changes happening in the Arctic ocean, The fast-changing Arctic overviews the aspects of ongoing transformation of the Arctic with main emphasis given to tourism impact, increased availability of mineral sources, fishing industry, human habitation, economic, military, and defense consequences. Among the many topics presented in the book, the likely effects of increased shipping through the Northwest Passage and the Northern Sea Route are brought into focus. The book is not a typical scientific study; it is rather a platform for several professionals and academicians who comment on history and possible future scenarios of environment, geopolitical and security issues in the Arctic. ... As regards security in the Arctic region, the majority of the co-authors stress the importance of dialogue and collaboration between countries involved in ship transportation in coastal Arctic seas that are expected to be more open in future. In one of the concluding chapters, L. W. Brigham concludes that "The Arctic will become a shipping superhighway," which again supports the idea of co-operation and a necessity for coordination of the exploitation of traffic routes in Arctic seas. The book can be recommended to professionals in the field of international relations, geodemography, strategic studies, and members of international organizations that have Arctic issues in their scope."
Read the full review: here
Culture, Conflict and Counterinsurgency (Stanford University Press, 2014):
• Ohio State Professor Peter Mansoor's Review of Culture, Conflict, and Counterinsurgency in the July 2014 edition of H-Diplo, H-Net Reviews, http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=41583:
"Culture, Conflict, and Counterinsurgency is a collaborative effort by ten scholars and military practitioners to explain the criticality of cultural knowledge and awareness in the messy small wars of the twenty-first century, in particular the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan. The product of a two-year study sponsored by the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterrey, California, this volume seeks to clarify the importance of cultural understanding to national security and foreign policy, the theory underpinning cultural analysis, practical difficulties involved in data collection and analysis, and how cultural issues have impacted recent military adventures in the Middle East and South Asia. Contributors include cultural and social anthropologists, historians, and military officers with both academic and field experience in anthropology and counterinsurgency warfare. The editors conclude that culture matters a great deal in conflict, and the United States and its allies can either make the effort to understand its impact on warfare or suffer the unhappy consequences of their ignorance. They optimistically conclude that Afghanistan can still turn out successful for the United States and its Afghan allies provided they undertake a “significant course change reflecting cultural nuances” (p. 3). Although this assessment may be overly optimistic given the impending departure of U.S. and NATO forces from Afghanistan, this book is highly recommended for scholars, military practitioners, and government officials involved in studying or crafting policies concerning irregular warfare in the twenty-first century. The volume is divided into two general sections, the first focusing on theory and methodology and the second on practice in the context of the war in Afghanistan. The first section will appeal primarily to scholars, although Alexei Gavriel’s chapter on the creation and use of cultural and ethnographic intelligence by military forces will spark both interest among military intelligence professionals and no doubt a great deal of angst among sociologists and anthropologists. The discussion of culture and the war in Afghanistan in the second part of the book will be of more interest to the generally informed reader. ... The editors conclude, “In the history of recent counterinsurgency efforts, the impact of cultural understanding on military operations cannot be underestimated” (p. 252). Perhaps the impact cannot be underestimated, but it can be ignored. There are a number of military officers and self-appointed counterinsurgency pundits who are trying to do just that in their quest to return the focus of the U.S. military to fighting state-on-state wars. As U.S. forces withdraw from the conflicts spawned by the terrorist attack on the United States on September 11, 2001, Americans and their military leaders seem united by a common desire to forgo any more of these messy, troop-intensive counterinsurgency conflicts. Unfortunately, in our haste to forget the history of the past decade-plus of warfare in the Middle East and South Asia, we may also jettison the very lessons—among them the importance of culture in determining the outcome of these conflicts—that may help future generations avoid the pitfalls that plagued too many U.S.-led military operations in the past. The editors and contributors to this volume make a convincing case that culture matters a great deal in the outcome of insurgencies and counterinsurgency warfare. Although this book has probably come too late to change the outcome of the conflict in Afghanistan, perhaps it is timely enough to educate the next generation of military leaders, who most certainly will see this type of war again."
Read the full review here. Printable Version: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=41583.
Scholarship Cited In:
2024:
• Vera Solovyeva. "Climate Change in Arctic and Indigenous Peoples: Challenges and Solutions." Ocean and Coastal Law Journal 29, no. 2 (2024): 317.
• Torbjørn Pedersen and Beate Steinveg, "Russia's Clashing Ambitions: Arctic Status Quo and World‐Order Revision," Politics and Governance, Vol 12 (January 2024), Special Issue on Arctic Regional Governance: Actors and Transformations, https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.7311.
• Basil Germond. Seapower in the Post-modern World. McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2024.
• Olena Dovgal, Tetiana Borko, Nataliia Miroshkina, Hanna Surina, Dmytro Konoplianyk, "Circular economy as an imperative for sustainable development," Scientific Bulletin of Mukachevo State University (Series: Economics), Vol. 11, No. 1 (2024), 19-28, doi: 10.52566/msu-econ1.2024.19.
• James Agbodzakey. "Consensus in Collaborative Governance." In Collaborative Governance Primer: An Antidote to Solving Complex Public Problems (Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2024), 91-101.
• Paula Kivimaa, Mikael Hildén, Timothy R. Carter, Claire Mosoni, Samuli Pitzén and Marja Helena Sivonen. "Evaluating Policy Coherence and Integration for Adaptation: The Case of EU Policies and Arctic Cross-border Climate Change Impacts." Climate Policy, April 5, 2024, 1–17, https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2024.2337168.
• Sopheak Chann, Alice Beban, Amanda Flaim, Timothy Gorman and Long Ly Vouch. Disorientations: The Political Ecology of "Displacing" Floating Communities from Cambodia's Tonle Sap Lake, Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography, Vol. 0, No. 0 (2024), 1-25, ISSN 0066-4812, doi: 10.1111/anti.1302.
• Benjamin T. Johnson. "This World of Tomorrow: Sociotechnical Imaginaries of Security in the Canadian Arctic," Critical Studies on Security, Vol. 12, No. 1 (2024) (online, 21 Jan 2024), DOI:10.1080/21624887.2024.2304413.
• Marc Jacobsen, Ulrik Pram Gad and Ole Wæver, eds. Greenland in Arctic Security: (De)securitization Dynamics under Climatic Thaw and Geopolitical Freeze. University of Michigan Press, 2024.
• Zafer Yilmaz. "PYD/YPG Terör Örgütünün Sinemacılık Hevesi: İkincil Kaynak Antropolojik İstihbarat," İstihbarat Çalışmaları ve Araştırmaları Dergisi-İÇAD (2024), https://doi.org/10.29228/icad.24.
2023:
• Klaus Dodds and Jen Rose Smith, "Against Decline? The Geographies and Temporalities of the Arctic Cryosphere," The Geographical Journal 189, No. 3 (September 2023), 388-397, https://doi.org/10.1111/geoj.1248.
• Arushi Singh, "Russia's Nuclear Strategy: Changes or Continuities?" Journal of Advanced Military Studies (JAMS), Vol. 14, No. 2 (2023), 34-48.
• Paul A. Adekunte, Matthew N. O. Sadiku, and Janet O. Sadiku, "Food Defense An Introduction," International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (IJTSRD), Vol. 7, No. 6 (November-December 2023), 652-659.
• Ekaterina S. Purgina and Andrey Menshikov, Environmental Imaginaries of the Arctic in the 21st Century Travel Writing, Changing Societies & Personalities 7, No. 4 (2023), 174–189.
• Arushi Singh, "Russia's Nuclear Strategy: Changes or Continuities," Marine Corps University Press, Journal of Advanced Military Studies, Vol 14, No. 2 (2023): 34-48, https://www.muse.jhu.edu/article/909030.
• Tatiana Chudakova, Cassandra Hartblay, and Maria Sidorkina, "A Chto Sluchilos'?: Ethnographies of Holding It Together," The Russian Review, December 5, 2023 (early online access), https://doi.org/10.1111/russ.12583
• Ekaterina Zmyvalova, "Indigenous Peoples of Russia During the War Time," Section V: Cooperation and Conflict, Arctic Yearbook 2023, Lassi Heininen, ed., Thematic Network (TN) on Geopolitics and Security of the University of the Arctic, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi.
• Andrey K. Krivorotov, БУДУЩАЯ АРКТИКА: РАСКОЛОТАЯ, «ЗЕЛЕНАЯ » И МАЛОЛЮДНАЯ? (ARCTIC OF THE FUTURE: SPLIT, “GREEN” AND DESERTED?), ГОСУДАРСТВЕННАЯ ПОЛИТИКА В АРКТИКЕ (УДК) 332.1, АРКТИКА 2035: актуальные вопросы, проблемы, решения № 4 (16) 2023, DOI 10.51823/74670_2023_4_4.
• Saniyat A. Agamagomedova, "Customs Control in the Arctic Zone of the Russian Federation," Социально-Экономическое Развитие/Social and Economic Development, Арктика и Север/Arctic and North, No. 52. (2023), 5–16, doi: 10.37482/issn2221-2698.2023.52.5.
• Lassi Heininen, "Pioneering Models for an Open Discussion and Northern Knowledge-Building – The Case Studies of Calotte Academy and Northern Research Forum," Section IV: Knowledge and Science (Briefing Note), Arctic Yearbook 2023, Lassi Heininen, ed., Thematic Network (TN) on Geopolitics and Security of the University of the Arctic, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi.
• Kévin de Blasiis, Benoit Mauvieux, Charlotte Elsworth-Edelsten, Thierry Pezé, Romain Jouffroy, and Rémy Hurdiel, "Photoperiod Impact on a Sailor’s Sleep-Wake Rhythm and Core Body Temperature in Polar Environment," Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Vol. 30, No. 4 (2019), 343-50.
• Adele Buckley, "Destabilization of the Arctic." Journal of Autonomy and Security Studies 7, no. 2 (2023), 128-143.
• Seyedmohammad Seyedi Asl, "21. Yüzyılda Kuzey Kutbu'nun Jeopolitik Konumu ve Oluşan Yeni Jeopolitik Ekseni (Rusya, Çin ve ABD) / Geopolitical Position of the Arctic in the 21st Century and the Formation New Geopolitical Axis (Russia, China, and USA)," Ekonomi İşletme Siyaset ve Uluslararası İlişkiler Dergisi (JEBPIR) Vol 9, No. 2 (2023), 229-246.
• Christian Enemark, Disease Security in Northeast Asia: Biological Weapons and Natural Plagues, Canberra Papers on Strategy and Defence, No. 156, Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, 2023.
• Robin D. Usher, "Pilot Study of Reliability and Validity of a Stakeholder Analysis System for Health Intervention Planning for Inuit of Kalaallit Nunaat." PhD Dissertation, The Chicago School of Professional Psychology, 2023.
• Pauline Pic, "Une Géographie Politique de l’Exploitation des Ressources Naturelles en Arctique Évolution Contrastée d’un Enjeu Polarisant," Annuaire Français de Relations Internationales (2023), 769-783.
• Emirhan Altunkaya, “Arctic Region in the Era of Climate Change: A Zone of Cooperation or a Zone of Conflict?” Ph.D. Dissertation, Middle East Technical University, 2023.
• Emilie Broek, Nicholas Olczak and Lisa Dellmuth, "The Involvement of Civil Society Organizations in Arctic Governance," SIPRI Insights on Peace and Security, No. 2023/02, February 2023.
• Heather N. Nicol and Lassi K. Heininen, "The Evolving Geopolitics of Polar Regions," Chapter 2 in Polar Cousins: Comparing Antarctic and Arctic Geostrategic Futures, eds. Christian Leuprecht and Douglas Causey. (Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 2023), 59-88 (62, 75, 77).
• Amy Chua, "Extract from Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations." Military Review (2023).
• Rebecca Monson, Gender, Property and Politics in the Pacific: Who Speaks for Land? (Cambridge University Press, 2023).
• Hema Nadarajah, "An Arctic in Flux: Singapore's Perspective." Asia Policy 18, no. 1 (2023): 39-48.
• Yitong Chen, "China's Arctic Policy and Engagement: Review and Prospects." Asia Policy 18, no. 1 (2023): 29-38.
• Zhang, Xiekui, Xinfeng Zuo, and Xinjian Chen. "Open doors: The impact of border reforming and opening policies on the regional border economies of China." International Studies of Economics (2023).
• Whitney Lackenbauer, Canadian Publications on Arctic Sovereignty, Security, and Circumpolar Governance, 2005-2022, Version 1.0. Peterborough: North American and Arctic Defence and Security Network (NAADSN), January 2023.
• J. L. Black, Eternal Putin?: Confronting Navalny, the Pandemic, Sanctions, and War with Ukraine (Rowman & Littlefield, 2023), n127.
• Grete K. Hovelsrud, Julia Olsen, Annika E. Nilsson, Bjørn Kaltenborn and Julien Lebel, "Managing Svalbard Tourism: Inconsistencies and Conflicts of Interest," Arctic Review on Law and Politics, Vol. 14 (2023), 86-106.
• Alexandria Jessika Fenn, The Tip of the Iceberg: Situating the U.S. Arctic Discourse as an Arctic Ally or Adversary, Master's Thesis in International Affairs, University of Iceland, June 2023.
2022:
• Lin Poyer, War at the Margins: Indigenous Experiences in World War II, University of Hawaii Press (Sustainable History Monograph Series), 2022.
• Przemysław Piotr Damski, "Arktyka w przestrzeni informacyjnej państw arktycznych w dobie wojny rosyjsko-ukraińskiej (24 lutego–8 czerwca 2022 r.)," Sprawy Międzynarodowe, Vol. 75, No. 2, 125-144, https://doi.org/10.35757/SM.2022.75.2.07.
• Sardana Nikolaeva, The Indigenous Political in the Post Soviet Sakha Republic, Doctoral Thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Manitoba, 2022.
• Daniel González Palau, Serafin Pazos-Vidal, Marola Padin Novas, and Tamara Espiñeira, Paradiplomacy in Europe: The cases of Galicia, Åland, Flanders and Greenland, Coppieters Foundation (2: 2002), 55, 57, 61, 62 and 67.
• Taggart, James M. “La Base Cultural De Una Rebelión Nahua.” Sistemas Simbólicos y Ritualidad. Hacer Con Saber Tomo I (2022): 93–112.
• Bidisha Banerji and Shashwat Sen, "Impact Of Climate Change On Geopolitics And International Relations," International Journal of Food and Nutritional Sciences (IJFANS) 11, No. 3 (December 2022), ISSN (print: 2319 1775; online: 2320 7876).
• Burcea, Iohana-Georgia. "Efectele războiului din Ucraina asupra Regiunii Arctice." INFOSFERA-Revista de studii de securitate si Informații pentru Apărare 14, no. 3 (2022): 41-48.
• Norvell, Allee. The Importance of Cultural Knowledge in Counterinsurgency. Undergraduate Honors Thesis. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2022.
• Kuhn, Annegret, and Valentina Treffenfeldt Montoya. "Indigene Souveränität und die Governance von Territorialität in der Arktis." ZIB Zeitschrift für Internationale Beziehungen 29, no. 1 (2022): 126-140.
• Zmyvalova, Ekaterina. "The Impact of the War in Ukraine on the Indigenous Small-numbered Peoples’ Rights in Russia." Arctic Review 13 (2022): 407-414.
• Palubinskaite, Diana. "The end of peaceful collaboration and ‘Arctic exceptionalism’in the light of Russian aggression in Ukraine during the 2022 invasion. To which extent should Russian aggression in the case of the Ukraine be interpreted as a threat to continued Arctic security?" Department of Culture, Communication and Globalization, Aarlborg Universitet, Master's Thesis, May 31, 2022.
• Churney, Major Brian, "Can the Canadian Armed Forces Meet the Expectations of the Government of Canada in the Arctic?" JCSP 45 Solo Flight, Canadian Forces College/Collège des Forces Canadiennes (2022).
• Mattheis, Frank, Nuno Sardinha Monteiro, Andreas Østhagen, Alexander Shaheen, Kirsty McLean, Carmen Gaudêncio, Ana Santos Pinto et al. "Seminário do 'Cento Atlântico'[III]." IDN Cadernos (2022).
• Khlopina, Anastasiia. "The current situation of Sweden in the context of possible threats and challenges: state of the defense and security policy and Arctic as a potential future conflict," Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, National University Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Faculty of Social Sciences and Social Technologies, Department of Political Science Master’s Thesis, 2022.
• Sherman, Jeff P. "Fighting in the Future Tense: Norm Collision and Imaginaries in the Emergence of Autonomous Weapons." PhD Dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz, 2022.
• Heininen, LASSI. "Climate Change and the Great Power Rivalry in the Arctic." Insight Turkey 24, no. 2 (2022): 25-38.
• Skriba, Andrei, and Arina Sapogova. "Environment, Geopolitics and Environmental Geopolitics in the Arctic: Is There a Logic of Conflict Among Institutions of Cooperation?" in Arctic Fever (Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2022), 85-112. .
• Sheng, Edmund Li. "A Panorama of the Arctic: Geopolitics and International Law," in Arctic Opportunities and Challenges (Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2022), 7-26.
• Heininen, Lassi. "The Age of Climate Change, as a Challenge for States, and IR Theories," in Arctic Fever (Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2022), 45-66.
• Coca, Pau López, and Adrián Morcillo Pazos. "Comparativa de las políticas de la UE y de China en el Ártico: Nuevos retos tras la Guerra de Ucrania." Quaderns IEE 1, no. 2 (2022): 87-114.
• Mossé, Marie. "An overview of Inuit perspectives on Franklin’s lost expedition (1845–1846): a few avenues for discussion and future research–commentary to Pawliw, Berthold, and Lasserre," Fennia-International Journal of Geography (2022).
• Salter, Mark B. "Quantum Sovereignty+ Entanglement." Quantum International Relations: A Human Science for World Politics 315 (2022): 262.
• Prášil, Matěj. Geopolitický význam GIUK, Diplomová práce, Institut politologických studií, Katedra politologie, Fakulta sociálních věd (Faculty of Social Sciences), VĚD Univerzita Karlova (2022).
• Stern, Pamela R., ed. The Inuit World. Routledge, 2022.
• Adnan, D. A. L. "Arktik Siyaseti ve Türkiye." Barış Araştırmaları ve Çatışma Çözümleri Dergisi 10, no. 1: 1-26.
• Norvell, Allee. "The Importance of Cultural Knowledge in Counterinsurgency." Undergraduate Honors Thesis. University of Nebraska-Lincoln. (2022).
• Gillespie, Josephine, and Dan Penny. "The effect of proximity to protected areas on community adaptation to environmental change." Journal of Environmental Management 301 (2022): 113805.
• Palubinskaite, Diana. "The End of Peaceful Collaboration and ‘Arctic Exceptionalism’ in the Light of Russian Aggression in Ukraine During the 2022 Invasion: To which extent should Russian aggression in the case of the Ukraine be interpreted as a threat to continued Arctic security?" Master's Thesis, Department of Culture, Communication, and Globalization, Aalborg University, May 31, 2022.
• Andréanne Brunet-Bélanger, "Inégalités et pandémie dans les communautés autochtones au Paraguay," Cahiers des Amériques Latines Vol. 99 (2022): 201-217
• Chris McDonald and Lorena Figueiredo, "A Framework for Comparative Assessment of Indigenous Land Governance." Land 2022: 11 (14 June 2022), 906, https://doi.org/10.3390/land11060906.
• Anna Sharapova, Sara L. Seck, Sarah L. MacLeod, Olga Koubrak, "Indigenous Rights and Interests in a Changing Arctic Ocean: Canadian and Russian Experiences and Challenges," Arctic Review on Law and Politics, Vol. 13 (2022), 286–311, http://dx.doi.org/10.23865/arctic.v13.3264.
2021:
• James Kraska. "Command Accountability for AI Weapon Systems in the Law of Armed Conflict." International Law Studies 97, no. 1 (2021): 22.
• Laura Eerkes-Medrano and Henry P. Huntington, "Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere." Frontiers in Climate, 3:675805 (June 2021) doi: 10.3389/fclim.2021.67580.
• Jen Rose Smith. "'Exceeding Beringia': Upending universal human events and wayward transits in Arctic spaces," Society and Space, 39, no. 1 (February 2021), 158-175.
• Astri Dankertsen, Elisabeth Pettersen, and Jill-Beth Otterlei. "'If we want to have a good future, we need to do something about it.' Youth, security and imagined horizons in the intercultural Arctic Norway," Acta Borealia: A Nordic Journal of Circumpolar Societies, 38:2 (2021), 150-169, DOI: 10.1080/08003831.2021.1982547
• Oya DAĞLAR MACAR and Bumin Kağan OĞUZ. "Tarihten Bugüne Rusya'nın Arktik Politikaları: Değişimler ve Süreklilikler." International Journal of Politics and Security 3, no. 1 (Arktik Özel Sayısı) (2021): 336-362.
• Silva, Pedro Henrique Iranço, and Naiane Inez Cossul. "O degelo no Ártico e a nova frente geopolítica para a Rússia." Conjuntura Global 10, no. 1 (2021).
• Huebert, Rob. "Chapter 4: Understanding Arctic Security: A Defence of Traditional Security Analysis," in Breaking Through: Understanding Sovereignty and Security in the Circumpolar Arctic. University of Toronto Press, 2021, 80-96.
• Graham, Lorie. "Expert Testimony of Professor Lorie M. Graham Before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Caso Pueblos Indígenas Maya Kaqchikel de Sumpango y Otros Vs. Guatemala, Case No. CDH-3-2020." (2021).
• Colombo, Roberto, and Emil Aslan Souleimanov. Counterinsurgency Warfare and Brutalisation: The Second Russian-Chechen War. Routledge, 2021.
• Kaura, Vinay. "The Changing Landscape of India-Pakistan-Afghanistan Relationship," in Pande, Aparna, ed., Routledge Handbook on South Asian Foreign Policy (2021): 111-124.
• Oppenheimer, P. "Shipping Through an Arctic Council Lens." (2021).
• Lassi Heininen. "The ‘Regime’ Nature of the Arctic: Implications for World Order." In The Arctic and World Order, pp. 309-325. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021.
• Martijn Kitzen and Christina van Kuijck, Chapter 15: All Deterrence Is Local: The Utility and Application of Localised Deterrence in Counterinsurgency in NL ARMS: Netherlands Annual Review of Military Studies 2020; Deterrence in the 21st Century—Insights from Theory and Practice, ed. Frans Osinga and Tim Sweijs (2021), 290.
• Cahley Tod-Tims, "'We are starving for our food': Country food (in) security in Inuvik, Northwest Territories," in The Inuit World, Pamela Stern, ed., Routledge, 2021, 270-287.
• Arda Özkan, Ankara University, Guest Editor, Special Issue on the Arctic/Arktik Özel Sayısı, International Journal of Politics and Security (IJPS), Vol. 3, No. 2 (2021).
• Salih Yilmaz, Arktika’da Rusya-Çin İş Birliği Ve Türkiye'nin Arktika Politikasi, İstihbarat ve Güvenlik Üzerine Çalışmalar (Studies on Intelligence and Security), eds., Tuğg. Murat Bulut, Prof. Dr. İsmail Hakkı Demircioğlu, Doç. Dr. Tekin Avaner, Doç. Dr. Gökhan İbrahim Öğünç, Dr. Mehmet Kahya, Dr. Bülent Sungur, Nobel Bilimsel, 2021, 397-414.
• Dağlar Macar and Oya ve Bumin Kağan Oğuz. “Tarihten Bugüne Rusya’nın Arktik Politikaları: Değişimler ve Süreklilikler,” International Journal of Politics and Security (IJPS), Cilt. 3, Sayı. 1, 2021, 336-362, .
2020:
• James M. Taggart, The Rain Gods’ Rebellion: The Cultural Basis of a Nahua Insurgency. University Press of Colorado, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1353/book.75859.
• Ekaterina Zmyvalova, “Human Rights of Indigenous Small-Numbered Peoples in Russia: Recent Developments.” Arctic Review on Law and Politics 11 (2020): 334–59. https://www.jstor.org/stable/48710636.
• Sebastian Knechtand and Paula Laubenstein, "Is Arctic governance research in crisis? A pathological diagnosis," Polar Record 56: E35 (December 2020), doi:10.1017/S0032247420000352.
• Sarah Kate Milne. "Security on Ice: The Historical Transformation of Regional Security and International Society in the Arctic from the Cold War to the Twenty-First Century," Doctoral Thesis, Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Limerick, August 15, 2020, https://hdl.handle.net/10344/9525.
• Andreas Østhagen. "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Three Levels of Arctic Geopolitics," Kristina Spohr and Daniel S. Hamilton, eds., The Arctic and World Order (Foreign Policy Institute and Kissinger Center for Global Affairs, School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, 2020).
• Christopher Tremoglie. "Arctic Geopolitics Reconsidered: Pathways to Conflict and Cooperation" 20 June 2020. CUREJ: College Undergraduate Research Electronic Journal, University of Pennsylvania, https://repository.upenn.edu/curej/250.
• Major Brian Churney, "Can the Canadian Armed Forces Meet the Expectations of the Government of Canada in the Arctic," Solo Flight, JCSP 45 (2018-2020), Canadian Forces College, https://www.cfc.forces.gc.ca/259/290/308/305/churney.pdf.
• Arbakhan Magomedov. "The Russian State and the Arctic Indigenous Peoples: Is Politics Coming Back?." Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization 28, no. 4 (2020): 541-564.
• Avinoam Meir, Batya Roded, and Arnon Ben-Israel. "Janus-faced mobility, sense of road-as-place and Indigenous Bedouin-Jewish settlers relationships." Settler Colonial Studies (2020): 1-21.
• Lt. Col. Kirby R. “Bo” Dennis. "Preparing for the Unexpected: Enhancing Army Readiness in the Arctic." Military Review 100, no. 4 (2020): 6.
• Huang, Daquan, Yue Lang, and Tao Liu. "Evolving population distribution in China’s border regions: Spatial differences, driving forces and policy implications." Plos One 15, no. 10 (2020): e0240592.
• Laleh Khalili. "Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency in the Neoliberal Age," Chapter 18 in The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Middle-Eastern and North African History (2020): 365.
• Heather Exner-Pirot and Rob Huebert. "Arctic Security,” Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (2020).
• Lassi Heininen. “Security Perspectives from Finland.” Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (2020).
• Rauna Kuokkanen, and Victoria Sweet. “Indigenous Security Theory.” Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (2020).
• Mario Marinov. “The Militarisation of the Arctic and the Growing Importance of the Far North for Great Power Politics,” Strategic Changes in Security and International Relations (2020): 169.
• Andreas Østhagen. Coast Guards and Ocean Politics in the Arctic. Palgrave Pivot, Singapore (2020).
• Vuković, Nebojša. “Do we need revision of the key geopolitical paradigms?” Medjunarodni problemi (International Problems, published by the Institute of International Politics and Economics, Belgrade, Serbia)72, No. 1 (2020): 15-36.
• Camille Zuber. "Regulatory gaps in the Arctic legal framework regarding vessel-source pollution: the exclusion of harmful shipping pollutants such as black carbon and noise pollution from the Polar Code, from MARPOL, and from the IMO regime–an analysis of the present legal shortcomings in protecting the Arctic environment from vessel-source pollution." Master's Thesis, 2020.
• Adnan Dal. Cooperative Role of the Arctic Council as an Example of Regime Formation. IJOPEC PUBLICATION, 2020.
• Peter Kikkert and P. Whitney Lackenbauer. "The Militarization of the Arctic to 1990." In The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics, pp. 487-505. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2020 (5 November 2019).
• LCDR Jeffrey Anderson. "International Strait in the Arctic: Implications for the RCN," JCSP 46 Service Paper, CANADIAN FORCES COLLEGE, 2019-20 (2020).
• Camille Escudé, Coopération Politique et Intégration Régionale en Arctique (1996-2019): Construction d’une région: naissance, développement et remise en cause d’un nouvel espace politique régional. Institut d’études politiques de paris, Ecole doctorale de sciences po, Programme doctoral en science politique, mention relations internationales, Centre de recherches internationales (CERI), Doctorat en science politique - sciences po, 2020.
• Cahley Tod-Tims, "Hungry all the time": Contemporary experiences of and perspectives on traditional food access in Inuvik, NWT, Master's Thesis in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 2020.
2019:
• Holly Ann Dobbins, Nunavut, A Creation Story. The Inuit Movement in Canada's Newest Territory, Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Social Sciences, Syracuse University (2019).
• Timothy J. Demy, ed., The U.S. Naval Institute on Arctic Naval Operations, Naval Institute Press, 2019.
• Minhas, Ahmed Saeed, Bashir Ahmad, and Masrur Alam Khan. "Seizing Kashmir's Identity: Implications for the Global Peace and Stability." NDU Journal (Pakistan), 2019.
• Jane Freeman, Indigeneity and Me, Te Kaharoa, Vol. 12, 2019, ISSN 1178-6035.
• De Buitrago and Reinke. “Risk Representations and Confrontational Actions in the Arctic.” Journal of Strategic Security 12, no. 3 (2019): 13-36.
• Jeremy M. Mckenzie, Instead of Buying Greenland, Enhance Security & Cooperation, The Pacific Council Magazine, November26, 2019, https://www.pacificcouncil.org/newsroom/instead-buying-greenland-enhance-security-cooperation.
• Freedman, Lawrence, and Jeffrey Michaels. “Offence and Defence.” In The Evolution of Nuclear Strategy, pp. 35-50. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2019.
• Korkina, Varvara. “Indigenous Youth in Russia: Challenges and Opportunities.” (2019): 141-155.
• Salter, Mark B. “Arctic Security, Territory, Population: Canadian Sovereignty and the International.” International Political Sociology 13, no. 4 (2019): 358-374.
• Springer, LTC Nathan R. “United States Military Governance,” School of Advanced Military Studies, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, KS (2019).
• Zojer, Gerald. “The Interconnectedness of Digitalisation and Human Security in the European High North: Cybersecurity Conceptualised through the Human Security Lens.” The Yearbook of Polar Law Online 10, no. 1 (2019): 297-320.
• Jacobs, Bette. "Indigenous identity: Summary and future directions." Statistical Journal of the IAOS, vol. 35, no. 1 (March 2019): 147-157.
• French, Nadia. "Not All Black and White: The Environmental Dimension of Arctic Exploration." In Arctic Triumph: Northern Innovation and Persistence, Nikolas Sellheim, Yuliya V. Zaika, Ilan Kelman, eds. (Cham, Switzerland: Springer Polar Sciences Series, 2019), 129-146.
• Yuwa Wei, Issues Decisive for China’s Rise or Fall: An International Law Perspective (Singapore: Springer Nature, 2019).
Gojowsky, Torsten, and Sebastian Koegler. Building Special Operations Relationships with Fragile Partners: Best Practices from Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan. Vol. 17, BoD–Books on Demand, 2019.
• Rasul Bakhsh Rais, Geopolitics on the Pakistan–Afghanistan Borderland: An Overview of Different Historical Phases, Geopolitics 24:2, 284-307.
• Sidorova, Evgeniia (Jen). “Circumpolar Indigeneity in Canada, Russia, and the United States (Alaska): Do Differences Result in Representational Challenges for the Arctic Council?” Arctic 72, no. 1 (2019): 71–81.
• Michael J, Swangler. Fiat Currency, From Wallet to Museum: Accelerating the Inevitable in the Name of Homeland Security. Thesis, Master of Arts in Security Studies (Homeland Security and Defense), Naval Postgraduate School, June 1, 2019.
• Andreas Østhagen, Maritime Tasks and Challenges in the Arctic, Chapter 3, Coast Guards and Ocean Politics in the Arctic, Springer Nature, 2019.
• Sophia Beatrice Ord, Canada's Conduct of Lawful Relations: The Hul'qumi'num TreatyGroup's Jurisdictional Entanglements in Non-Aboriginal Law. Master of Law by Research (LLMRes) Thesis, University of Kent, 2019.
• Jana Shoemaker, From the Land of Ice and Snow: Inuit, Ice and the Northwest Passage, Advanced Masters in Public International Law Thesis, Leiden Universiteit in the Netherlands, 2019.
• Margaret Boyce, One Hundred Words for Conquest: Curating Arctic Sovereignty at the Winnipeg Art Gallery, Doctoral Thesis, School of Graduate Studies (English and Cultural Studies), Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University, 2019.
2018:
• Gray, Colin S. Theory of Strategy, Oxford University Press (2018).
• Glenn, Russell. New Directions in Strategic Thinking 2.0, ANU Strategic Defence Studies Centre's Golden Anniversary Conference Proceedings, ANU Press, 2018.
• Nuttall, Mark. "Self-determination and indigenous governance in the Arctic." In The Routledge Handbook of the Polar Regions, pp. 93-106. Routledge, 2018.
• O’Leary, Derek Kane. "Public and National Imagination of the Arctic." In Eurasia’s Maritime Rise and Global Security, pp. 197-213. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2018.
• MAJ Matthew W. Todd, U.S. Army, The Strategic Context of the Arctic and the Implications for the U.S. Army, School of Advanced Military Studies Monograph, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, May 24, 2018.
• Heininen, Lassi. "Arctic Geopolitics from Classical to Critical Approach–Importance of Immaterial Factors." Geography, Environment, Sustainability 11, no. 1 (2018): 171-186.
• Moe, Louise Wiuff. "Counter-insurgency in the Somali territories: the ‘grey zone’between peace and pacification." International Affairs 94, no. 2 (2018): 319-341.
• Colgan, Jeff D. "Climate Change and the Politics of Military Bases." Global Environmental Politics (2018): 33-51.
• Atkins, Ed. "Saltwater Geopolitics in North America," Chapter 3 in Widening the Scope of Environmental Policies in North America: Towards Blue Approaches, edited by Dr. Gustavo Sosa-Nunez, Palgrave Macmillan (2018).
• Hong, Nong. "China's Interests in the Arctic: Opportunities and Challenges," Institute for China-America Studies (ICAS), 2018, http://chinaus-icas.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/2018.03.06-China-Arctic-Report.pdf
• Barack, Calvince. "How does the terrorist group Al-Qaeda select their targets and what is their motivation?," GRIN.com, 2018, http://content.grin.com/document/v384339.pdf
• Payne, Kenneth. "Artificial Intelligence: A Revolution in Strategic Affairs?." Survival 60, no. 5 (2018): 7-32.
• Zojer, Gerald. "The Role of Hydrocarbon Development in Arctic Governance: A Suitable Approach for Human Development in the Region?." In Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic (Brill Nijhoff, 2018), 212-242.
• Maurer, John D. "Divided Counsels: Competing Approaches to SALT, 1969–1970." Diplomatic History (2018).
• Kronfeld, Melissa Jane. "A Viper’s Nest of Perils: The Construction and Prioritization of Threats in the Post-Cold War Era and the Evolution of American National Security Policy," Doctoral Thesis, Graduate Program in Global Affairs, Rutgers University, May 2018, https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/57350/PDF/1/play/.
• Harvey, Layne Ross, Would the proposed reforms affecting ahu whenua trusts have impeded hapū in the development of their lands? A Ngāti Awa perspective, Doctoral Thesis, Faculty of Business, Auckland University of Technology, June 30, 2018.
• Jordan Steingard, The Distant Early Warning Line: Geographies, Infrastructures, and Environments of Warning, Master's Thesis, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, September 2018.
• Tashi Tewa, "Himalayan Indigenous Peoples in Local Elections after 20 years: The Historical Gendered Perspective from Dolpo," in Walking and Learning with Indigenous Peoples: A Contribution to the 5th Anniversary of the International Summer Program on Indigenous Peoples’ Rights and Policy at Columbia University, eds. Pamela Calla and Elsa Stamatapolou (New York: Columbia University Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race (SCER) and Institute for the Study of Human Rights (ISHR), 2018).
2017:
• Nadine C., Fabbi, Jason C. Young, and Eric W. Finke, "Ukiuqta’qtumi Hivuniptingnun: One Arctic, One Future," Chapter 8 in One Arctic, edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer, Heather Nicol, and Wilfrid Greaves. Ottawa: Canadian Arctic Resources Committee and Waterloo: Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, 2017.
• Heather Nicol, "Chapter Twelve: Conclusions," in Heather Nicol and P. Whitney Lackenbauer, eds. The Networked North: Borders and Borderlands in the Canadian Arctic Region. Waterloo, Ontario: Borders in Globalization/Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, 2017.
• Kristen L. Shake (Corresponding Author), Karen E. Frey, Deborah G. Martin and Philip E. Steinberg, (Un)frozen Spaces: Exploring the Role of Sea Ice in the Marine Socio-legal Spaces of the Bering and Beaufort Seas, Journal of Borderlands Studies 33, No. 2 (2017), 239-253, published onlone 9 July 2017.
• John D. Maurer, "An Era of Negotiation: Salt in the Nixon Administration, 1969-1972." PhD dissertation, Georgetown University, 2017.
• David J. Katz, "Community-Based Development in Rural Afghanistan: First, Assume a Community," Peaceworks (Washington: United States Institute of Peace, April 24, 2017).
• Rasul Bakhsh Rais, "Geopolitics on the Pakistan–Afghanistan Borderland: An Overview of Different Historical Phases." Geopolitics (2017): 1-24.
• Michael Byers and Andreas Østhagen. "Why Does Canada Have So Many Unresolved Maritime Boundary Disputes?." Canadian Yearbook of International Law/Annuaire canadien de droit international (2017): 1-62.
• Ed Atkins, "Saltwater Geopolitics in North America." Widening the Scope of Environmental Policies in North America. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 23 August 2017 (online), 35-56.
• Andrew M. Wender. “Asymmetry and the Reimagining of Political Theology,” Teloscope: TELOS: Critical Theory of the Contemporary (March 8, 2017).
• Arabinda Acharya. "The Right War, the Just War? Assessing the Fight against Terrorism since 9/11," Talking to the Enemy. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2017.
• Sini Hangaslammi, "Arktis ja muuttuva suvereniteetti: Diskurssianalyysi Kanadan liittovaltiohallinnon ja inuiittijärjestöjen suvereniteettikäsityksistä" (2017).
• Lawrence Rubin, "Islamic political activism among Israel’s Negev Bedouin population," British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 44, no. 3 (2017): 429-446.
• Sabrina Pastorková, "Critical assessment of the Arctic's geostrategic importance during World War I and World War II" (2017).
• Geir Hønneland, "The Arctic Wave," in Arctic Euphoria and International High North Politics, pp. 83-100. Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2017.
• Emil Bessels and William Barr. Polaris: The Chief Scientist's Recollections of the American North Pole Expedition, 1871-73. University of Calgary Press, 2017.
• Alain Lafreniere, Can We Just Get Along Already? Canadian Arctic Sovereignty is American Security. School of Advanced Air and Space Studies, Maxwell Air Force Base, 2017.
• Donald R. Rothwell, Arctic Ocean Shipping: Navigation, Security and Sovereignty in the North American Arctic. Brill Research Perspectives in the Law of the Sea, Vol.1, No. 3 (2017), 1-88. https://doi.org/10.1163/24519359-12340103.
• Steinar Skaar, The Utility of Coercion Theory in the Afghan Conflict, Ph.D. Thesis, School of Humanities, College of Arts, University of Glasgow, 2017, https://theses.gla.ac.uk/8872/.
• Jard Olina Ykema, Participation of Non-Arctic States in the Arctic Council: Analysed through neoliberal institutionalism and constructivism. Master’s Thesis, International Public Management and Public Policy, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, 2017.
• Shenuka de Sylva and Arnaud Leurquin, Resilient Living Environments: Identifying a Design Approach to Creating Housing Suited to Culture and Context, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, The Asian Conference on the Social Sciences, 2017.
• Kamrul Hossain, Gerald Zojer, Wilfried Greaves, J. Miguel Roncero, and Micheal Sheehan, "Constructing Arctic Security: An inter-disciplinary approach to understanding security in the Barents region," Polar Record, Vol. 53, No. 01 (2017).
2016:
• Daniel Drache, Fred Fletcher and Coral Voss, What the Canadian Public is Being Told About the More than 1200 Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women and First Nations Issues: A Content and Context Analysis of Major Mainstream Canadian Media, 2014-2015, SSRN Electronic Journal, April 2, 2016.
• Adam Lajeunesse and P. Whitney Lackenbauer, "The Canadian Armed Forces in the Arctic: Building Capabilities and Connections," Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 16, No. 4 (2016).
• Gregory Bereiter, The U.S. Navy in Operation Enduring Freedom, 2001-2002, Naval History & Heritage Command (2016), https://www.history.navy.mil/content/dam/nhhc/research/library/online-reading-room/war-and-conflict/us-navy-operation-enduring-freedom/Chrono-OEF%20Final-PDFversion.pdf.
• Nadine C. Fabbi, "Chapter 6: Inuit Foreign Policy and International Relations in the Arctic," in Lassi Heininen and Heather Nicol, eds., Climate Change and Human Security from a Northern Point of View, Waterloo, ON: Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, St. Jerome’s University, Waterloo, 2016, 77-96.
• P. Whitney Lackenbauer and James Manicom, "Chapter 9: Canada’s Northern Strategy and East Asian Interests in the Arctic," in Lassi Heininen and Heather Nicol, eds., Climate Change and Human Security from a Northern Point of View, Waterloo, ON: Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, St. Jerome’s University, 2016, 127-164.
• Ron Robin, The Cold World They Made. Harvard University Press, 2016.
• Yee-Kuang Heng, Managing Global Risks in the Urban Age: Singapore and the Making of a Global City. Routledge, 2016.
• Michael Broderick. Reconstructing Strangelove: Inside Stanley Kubrick's 'Nightmare Comedy'. Columbia University Press, 2016.
• Cathy Sherry, Strata Title Property Rights: Private governance of multi-owned properties. Routledge, 2016.
• Jérémie Gilbert. Indigenous Peoples' Land Rights under International Law. Brill, 2016.
• M. Troy Burnett, ed. Natural Resource Conflicts [2 volumes]: From Blood Diamonds to Rainforest Destruction. Abc-Clio, 2016.
• Frank R. Spellman, Food Supply Protection and Homeland Security. Bernan Press, 2016.
• Alexey Fenenko, "International Norms in the New Common Spaces: A New Challenge in the Twenty-First Century." In Challenge and Change, pp. 225-245. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016.
• Leo Evandro Figueiredo dos Santos, "Cooperação e conflitos nas regiões polares: um cenário para o século XXI." (2016).
• Judith Tinnes. "Bibliography on Legal Aspects of Terrorism." Perspectives on Terrorism 10, no. 4 (2016).
• Melanie Hawes. "An Era of Convergence: Joint Defense between the United States and Canada 1949-1963." (2016).
• Graham Huggan. "Introduction: Unscrambling the Arctic." In Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North, pp. 1-29. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016.
• Emily Tsui. "Home in the North: The Northern Forum, Alaska, and Circumpolar Subnational Governance." (2016).
• Kirk Dombrowski, Patrick Habecker, G. Robin Gauthier, Bilal Khan, Joshua Moses, Dmitry V. Arzyutov, Diane Austin-Broos, et al. "Relocation Redux: Labrador Inuit Population Movements and Inequalities in the Land Claims Era." Current Anthropology 57, no. 6 (2016).
• Erika Simpson. "Nuclear Weapons and NATO: Is it safer to deter or to disarm?" (2016). CPSA/ISA-Canada Section on International Relations, Session: C1(b) – Governing Weapons, May 31, 2016, 8:45-10:15 am.
• Robert J. Bunker. Blood Sacrifices: Violent Non-State Actors and Dark Magico-Religious Activities. iUniverse, 2016.
• Robert W. Orttung and Andreas Wenger. "Explaining Cooperation and Conflict in Marine Boundary Disputes Involving Energy Deposits." Region: Regional Studies of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia 5, no. 1 (2016): 75-96.
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Europe's ‘Others’ in the Polar Mediterranean." Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 107, no. 2 (2016): 177-188.
• Dag Avango. "Heritage in action: historical remains in polar conflicts." Science, Geopolitics and Culture in the Polar Region: Norden Beyond Borders (2016): 329.
• Daniel J. Brown. "Institutional Memory and the US Air Force." Air & Space Power Journal 30, no. 2 (2016): 38.
• Kathleen A. Tobin, "People, not property: population issues and the neutron bomb." Cold War History (2016): 1-19.
• Josef Amann, "It’s getting hot in here: Die Arktis im Wandel," Working Papers des Forums Regensburger Politikwissenschaftler – FRP Working Paper 02/2016, Regensburg: April 2016.
• Graham Huggan, "Introduction: Unscrambling the Arctic." In Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North (London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016), 1-29.
• Lawrence Rubin, "Islamic political activism among Israel’s Negev Bedouin population." British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (2016): 1-18.
• Dong Kyu Lee, "An Introductory Study on a Disaster Management System Using Big Data-With Focus on the Comparison of the United States, Britain, and South Korea." 한국위기관리논집 12 (2016): 17-32.
• Andreas Østhagen, "High North, Low Politics—Maritime Cooperation with Russia in the Arctic." Arctic Review 7.1 (2016).
• Erico Duarte and Lucas Sudbrack, "A política internacional do Ártico no século XXI: degelo e a nova fronteira Russa," ("Arctic international politics in XXI century: defrost and the new Russian frontier"), Rev. Carta Inter., Belo Horizonte, V. 11, N. 1 (2016), 221-244.
• Odysseas Gilis (Οδυσσέας Γκιλής), Επιμέλεια συλλογής, επεξεργασίας και ταξινόμησης υλικού. Μελλον-Μελοντολογα-Future: Πρόβλεψη, forecast, Forecasting, Future, Futurology. Θεσσαλονίκη 2016.
• Odd Jarl Borch, Natalia Andreassen, Nataly Marchenko, Valur Ingimundarson, Halla Gunnarsdóttir, Iurii Iudin, Sergey Petrov, Uffe Jacobsen and Birita í Dali, Maritime Activity in the High North: Current and Estimated Level Up to 2025, Maritime International Partnership in the High North (MARPART), MARPART Project Report 1, MARPART Research Consortium, 2016.
• Irena Leisbet Ceridwen Connon and Archie W. Simpson , "Critical Geography: An Introduction," in Stephen McGlinchey, Rosie Walters and Christian Scheinpflug (eds.), International Relations Theory (Bristol, England: e-International Relations, 2016), 110-116.
• Janosch Prinz and Conrad Schetter, "Conditioned Sovereignty: The Creation and Legitimation of Spaces of Violence in ‘War on Terror’," Alternatives 41, No. 3 (2016), 119-136, https://doi.org/10.1177/0304375417700171.
• Kristine Nicole Thoreson, Reframing an Arctic Image, Out of the Sublime, Doctoral thesis, Graduate Program of Art, University of Calgary, January 2016, http://hdl.handle.net/11023/2779, doi:10.11575/PRISM/27572.
2015:
• Kevin Rosner et al., Section 3: Interplay of Security and Sustainable Development: Three Examples, in Integrating Sustainable Development and Security: An Analytical Approach with Examples from the Middle East and North Africa, the Arctic and Central Asia, Stockholm Environment Institute Report 2014-15 (2015), https://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep02788.
Nadine C. Fabbi, Inuit Nunaat as an Emerging Region in Area Studies: Building an Arctic Studies Program South of the Tree Line, Doctoral Thesis, Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, Educational Leadership and Policy, University of British Columbia, April 2015.
• Terrence M. O'Sullivan, "Environmental Security is Homeland Security: Climate Disruption as the Ultimate Disaster Risk Multiplier," Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy Vol. 6, No. 2 (2015): 183-222.
• Emily Marie Ernst, "Utilizing Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) in a comprehensive counterinsurgency strategy against the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan." PhD dissertation, 2015.
• Mushtaq Ahmad Omar, "National unity government: an exceptional outcome to the crisis of the 2014 presidential elections in Afghanistan." PhD dissertation, San Francisco State University, 2015.
• Adam Stępień, "Internal Contradictions and External Anxieties: One ‘Coherent’Arctic Policy for the European Union?" The Yearbook of Polar Law Online Vol. 7, No. 1 (2015): 249-289.
• Jamie Gaskarth, "Strategy in a Complex World." The RUSI Journal 160.6 (2015): 4-11.
• Adam Stepien, Timo Koivurova, and Paula Kankaanpaa, The Changing Arctic and the European Union. Martinus Nijhoff, Nihoff Law Specials No. 89 (October 15, 2015).
• Terry Fenge and Jim Aldridge, eds., Keeping Promises: The Royal Proclamation of 1763, Aboriginal Rights, and Treaties in Canada. McGill-Queen's Native and Northern Series, Book 78 (Mcgill-Queens University Press, 2015).
• Patricia Owens, Economy of Force: Counterinsurgency and the Historical Rise of the Social. Cambridge Studies in International Relations. (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2016: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2015).
• Frank Sejersen, Rethinking Greenland and the Arctic in the Era of Climate Change: New Northern Horizons (The Earthscan Science in Society Series, 2015).
• Philip E. Steinberg, Jeremy Tasch, Hannes Gerhardt, Contesting the Arctic: Rethinking Politics in the Circumpolar North (I.B.Tauris, 2015).
• Martin Björk, Geopolitisk dynamik: Ett teoriutvecklande anspråk (Geopolitical dynamics: A theoretical claim), Swedish National Defence College, Department of Security and Strategic Studies (ISS). (Swedish). Independent thesis, advanced level, http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:824042/FULLTEXT01.pdf (June 4, 2015).
• Jillian Terry, "Feminist Ethics and War: Conceptualising Care in Post-9/11 Counterinsurgency," Department of International Relations, London School of Economics. Paper presented at the 4th European Conference on Politics and Gender (ECPG), University of Uppsala, Sweden (11-13 June, 2015) citing Johnson and Zellen, eds, Culture, Conflict and Counter-insurgency.
• Marc James Leger. "From Climate Crisis to Climate Movement: A Conversation with Robert Van Waarden." Afterimage 42, no. 4 (2015): 4.
• Terrence M. O'Sullivan, "Environmental Security is Homeland Security: Climate Disruption as the Ultimate Disaster Risk Multiplier." Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy 6, no. 2 (2015): 183-222.
• Andrew J. Goodpaster, "Brief Notices." Survival 57.2 (2015): e1-11.
• Ethem Ilbiz and Benjamin L. Curtis. "Trendsetters, Trend Followers, and Individual Players: Obtaining Global Counterterror Actor Types from Proscribed Terror Lists." Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 38, no. 1 (2015): 39-61.
• Katarzyna Zysk and David Titley. "Signals, Noise, and Swans in Today's Arctic." SAIS Review of International Affairs 35, no. 1 (2015): 169-181.
• Justiina Dahl. "Assessments, models and international politics of the Arctic: why the “New North” narrative includes only bomber, polar bear, oil, and gas deposit models, and no original parts or an assembly manual." The Polar Journal 5, no. 1 (2015): 35-58.
• Marlene Laruelle, Russia's Arctic Strategies and the Future of the Far North, Routledge, 2015.
2014:
• Colin S. Gray, Strategy & Defence Planning: Meeting the challenge of uncertainty (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).
• Bruce D. Jones and David Steven, The Risk Pivot: Great Powers, International Security, and the Energy Revolution(Brookings Institution Press, 2014).
• Nicol, Heather. "Nunavut, Sovereignty, and the Future for Arctic Peoples’ Involvement in Regional Self-Determination." Northern Review 37 (2014).
• Calvince Omondi Barack, "The Terrorist Group’s Selection of Targets and Their Motivation: The case of Al Qaeda," Master's thesis, December 13, 2014.
• Nordic Council of Ministers, Marine invasive species in the Arctic, Nordic Council of Ministers, 2014.
• Øyvind Østerud and Geir Hønneland, "Geopolitics and International Governance in the Arctic," Arctic Review on Law and Politics, Volume 5, No. 2 (2014), 156–176.
• Natalia Nefidova, Environmental Public Debate: In the context of the Arctic in Russian and Norwegian Media. Master's Thesis in Culture, Environment and Sustainability, Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, September 2014.
• Mia M. Bennett, "North by Northeast: toward an Asian-Arctic region," Eurasian Geography and Economics, Vol 55, No. 1 (August 2014), 71-93.
• Emma Barry-Pheby, "Examining the Priorities of the Canadian Chairmanship of the Arctic Council: Current Obstacles in International Law, Policy, and Governance," Colorado Natural Resources, Energy & Environmental Law Review, 25 (Summer 2014): 259-419.
• Andrea Beck, "China’s strategy in the Arctic: a case of lawfare?" The Polar Journal 4.2 (2014): 306-318.
• Elizabeth Riddell-Dixon, "The seven-decade quest to maximize Canada’s continental shelf," International Journal, July 18, 2014.
• Pauline Wakeham, "At the Intersection of Apology and Sovereignty: The Arctic Exile Monument Project," Cultural Critique, No. 87 (Spring 2014), 84-143.
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Mediterranean Metaphors: Travel, Translation and Oceanic Imaginaries in the 'New Mediterraneans' of the Arctic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean" in Anderson, Jon & Peters, Kimberley, Water Worlds: Human Geographies of the Ocean (Ashgate, 2014), 23-37.
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Maintaining Hegemony at a Distance: The U.S. Arctic Region Policy Presidential Directive of 2009" in Powell, Richard & Dodds, Klaus, Polar Geopolitics? Knowledge, Resources and Legal Regimes (Edward Elgar, 2014), 113-130.
• Waliul Hasanat, "Searching for Synergies in International Governance Systems Developed in the Circumpolar North," McGill International Journal of Sustainable Development Law & Policy, Special Issue on Polar Law Vol. 9, Issue 2 (2014), 5-41.
• Hong, Nong. "Emerging interests of non-Arctic countries in the Arctic: a Chinese perspective." The Polar Journal 4.2 (2014): 271-286.
• Glenn Hastedt, Donna L. Lybecker, Vaughn P. Shannon, Cases in International Relations: Pathways to Conflict and Cooperation, CQ Press (March 1, 2014)
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Steering Between Scylla and Charybdis: The Northwest Passage as Territorial Sea," Ocean Development & International Law, Volume 45, Issue 1, 2014 (January 2014), 84-106.
• Richard C. Powell and Klaus Dodds, eds., Polar Geopolitics? Knowledges, Resources and Legal Regimes (Edward Elgar Publishing, Jan 2014).
cJack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2015: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2014).
• Judith Tinnes, "Bibliography: Terrorism and the Media (including the Internet), Part 2," Perspectives on Terrorism, Vol 8, No. 6 (December 2014).
• Linda Fernandez, Brooks A. Kaiser and Niels Vestergaard, eds., Marine Invasive Species in the Arctic, TemaNord Environment, 2014.
2013:
• Lawrence Freedman, Strategy: A History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).
• Hew Strachan, The Direction of War: Contemporary Strategy in Historical Perspective. Cambridge University Press, 2013.
• Irina Zhilina, Security Outlook of the Arctic States and Perspectives on NATO’s Involvement, University of Akureyri, Master’s Programme in Polar Law, Faculty of Law and Social Sciences, Department of Law, University of Akureyri, September 2013.
• Arabinda Acharya, Ten Years After 9/11 - Rethinking the Jihadist Threat. Routledge, 2013.
• Margrét Cela, "Iceland: A Small Arctic State Facing Big Arctic Changes," The Yearbook of Polar Law Online, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Volume 5, Issue 1 (2013), 75–92.
• James Manicom, "Identity Politics and the Russia-Canada Continental Shelf Dispute: An Impediment to Cooperation?," Geopolitics, Volume 18, Issue 1, 2013.
• Kristian Åtland, "The Security Implications of Climate Change in the Arctic Ocean," Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean, NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security 2013, 205-216.
• Klaus Dodds, "The Ilulissat Declaration (2008): The Arctic States, 'Law of the Sea,' and Arctic Ocean," SAIS Review of International Affairs, Volume 33, Number 2, Summer-Fall 2013, 45-55.
• Heather R. Schimmelpfennig, "After the Disaster: Business Continuity," ANSI (publicaa.ansi.org), July 2013.
• Institute of the North, "New Book Released - The Fast-Changing Arctic: Rethinking Arctic Security for a Warmer World," July 12, 2013, http://www.institutenorth.org/news/entry/new-book-released.
• Sean A. Stein, "The Submarine -- The Key to Winning an Arctic Conflict," Research paper, Naval War College, May 15, 2013.
• Morrow, John Francis, Mercedes Destine Brown, and Peishan Wang. Adaptation of Russian Energy Companies to a Changing Arctic. Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), 2013.
• John Morrow, Peishan Wang, and Mercedes Brown, Adaptation of Russian Energy Companies to a Changing Arctic. In partnership with Alexey Dokuchaev, Ekaterina Tertyshnaya, and Kseniya. Laktionova Project Advisor: Svetlana Nikitina. Project Sponsor: Ernst & Young (CIS) B.V., Moscow Branch, Kirill Kharlashkin, 2013.
• Daniel W. Gray, "Changing Arctic: A Strategic Analysis of United States Arctic Policy and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea," Master's thesis, National Defense University, May 2013.
• Tereza Horejsova and Cody Morris Paris. "Tourism and the challenge of Arctic governance." International Journal of Tourism Policy 5, no. 1 (May 2013): 113-127.
• Amy Lauren Lovecraft, "The human geography of Arctic sea ice: Introduction." Polar Geography 36, No. 1-2 (Apr 2013): 1-4.
• Frédéric Lasserre, Jérôme Le Roy, and Richard Garon. "Is there an arms race in the Arctic?" Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 14, no. 3 & 4 (March 2013).
• Lisa M. Hodgetts, "The rediscovery of HMS Investigator: Archaeology, sovereignty and the colonial legacy in Canada’s Arctic." Journal of Social Archaeology 13, no. 1 (February 2013): 80-100.
• James Manicom, "The domestic politics of disputed Arctic boundaries: the Canadian case." Polar Record (Feb 2013), 1-11.
• Olivia, Mancuso, "Arctic meltdown: A problematic property rights structure translates into poor resource management." Studies by Undergraduate Researchers at Guelph 6, no. 2 (Winter 2013): 5-13.
• Jakob Steiner, Hijacked Drones, The Tuqay: Essays from Beyond the Well-Protected Domains, January 28, 2013.
• Kristian Åtland, The Security Implications of Climate Change in the Arctic Ocean, Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean (Springer: NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security), 2013, 205-216.
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2014: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2013).
• Barret Weber, The Politics of Development in Nunavut: Land Claims, Arctic Urbanization, and Geopolitics, Doctoral Thesis, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Spring 2013.
• Holmes, Angela, "Mainstream perspectives in "Indian Prince" by Trevino Brings Plenty" (2013). Representing Aboriginality 6, https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aboriginality/6.
• Corinna Röver, Security Concerns in the Arctic: Sweden's and Norway's National Strategies in the High North, Master's Thesis in Global Studies, University of Vienna, 2013.
• Vincenzo Ruggiero and Nigel South, Green Criminology and Crimes of the Economy: Theory, Research and Praxis, Journal of Critical Criminology 21 (2013): 359–373, published online May 16, 2013.
• Irina Zhilina, Security Outlook of the Arctic States and Perspectives on NATO’s Involvement, Master’s Programme in Polar Law, Faculty of Law and Social Sciences, University of Akureyri, September 2013.
• Heather R. Schimmelpfennig, After the Disaster: Business Continuity, ANSI Student Paper Competition (Second Place Winner), Columbia Southern University, 2013.
2012:
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2013: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2012).
• Fiammetta Borgia and Paolo Vargiu, The Inuit Declaration on Sovereignty in the Arctic: Between the Right to Self-Determination and a New Concept of Sovereignty?, The Yearbook of Polar Law Online, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2012, Volume 4, Issue 1, 189-204.
• Sao Noan Oo, The Shan’s fight for their Rights and Lost Homeland, Burma Digest / Shan Herald, Dec 24, 2012.
• Ana-Maria GHIMIȘ, The Arctic Region: From a frozen desert towards a hot geopolitical region, Center for European Policy Evaluation, December 10, 2012.
• Nadine C. Fabbi, "Inuit Political Engagement in the Arctic." Arctic Yearbook 2012 (November 2012): 161.
• Nikolai Vakhtin, "European University at St. Petersburg: New Program on Arctic/Siberian Studies." Sibirica 11, no. 3 (Winter 2012): 56-70.
• James Manicom, "Identity Politics and the Russia-Canada Continental Shelf Dispute: An Impediment to Cooperation?" Geopolitics, Fall 2012.
• Jeppe Strandsbjerg, "Cartopolitics, Geopolitics and Boundaries in the Arctic." Geopolitics 17, no. 4 (October 2012): 818-842.
• Peter Johnston, "Arctic Energy Resources: Security and Environmental Implications." Journal of Strategic Security 5, no. 3 (September 2012): 5.
• Alain Faure, ed. "What holds the Arctic together?" L'Harmattan, September 2012.
• Andrew Chater, A New Tipping Point: The Government of Canada, Northern Residents and Climate Change, A Paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Edmonton, Alberta, June 15, 2012, http://www.cpsa-acsp.ca/papers-2012/Chater.pdf.
• Chiara Rogate and Marco Ferrara, "Climate Change and Power Shifts in the Arctic Region," Bologna Center Journal of International Affairs 15 (Spring 2012), Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies Bologna Center, Johns Hopkins University.
• Siri E. Linz, Procedural Implications of the March 2011 Solicitor's Memorandum: Repatriation in Alaska, Master's Thesis, University of Washington, Spring 2012.
• Daniel Pomerants, "The Beaufort Sea Maritime Boundary Dispute: High Stakes for Canadian Arctic Sovereignty and Resource Extraction in a Changing Climate." PhD diss., York University, Spring 2012.
• Charles Officer and Jake Page. Fabulous Kingdom: The Exploration of the Arctic (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).
• Anders Frandsen, "Arktis: Fredelig udvikling eller militær konflikt?" Copenhagen Business School, June 1, 2012.
• Steve Dobransky, "Military Security, Energy Resources, and the Emergence of the Northwest Passage: Canada’s Arctic Dilemma," American Diplomacy, June 2012, http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/item/2012/0106/ca/dobransky_arctic.html.
• Micah I. Nodine, Lt. Col., USAF. "COIN: Is Current Doctrine Counterfeit?" School of Advanced Military Studies, U.S. Army Command and Staff General College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, AY 2012-001 (May 10, 2012).
• Rob Huebert, Heather Exner-Pirot, Adam Lajeunesse, and Jay Gulledge, Climate Change & International Security: The Arctic as a Bellwether, Arlington, VA: Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES), May 2012.
• Aleksei Fenenko, "Russia and the Competition for the Redivision of Polar Spaces," Russian Politics and Law 50, No. 2 (March-April 2012), 7-33.
• Gavin Kentch, "Comment: A Corporate Culture? The Environmental Justice Challenges of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act," Mississippi Law Journal 81 (March 2012), 813.
• Byron Ruby, "Conflict or Cooperation? Arctic Geopolitics and Climate Change," Berkeley Undergraduate Journal 25, No. 1 (January 2012).
• Nong Hong, "The Energy Factor in the Arctic Dispute: A Pathway to Conflict or Cooperation?" The Journal of World Energy Law & Business, January 2012.
• Personenlexikon Internationale Beziehungen Virtuell (PIBv), January 2012: "Bernard Brodie, Sekundärliteratur."
• Charles M. Perry and Bobby Andersen, New Strategic Dynamics in the Arctic Region: Implications for National Security and International Collaboration, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2012.
• Bernhard Gissibl, Sabine Hohler, Patrick Kupper, eds., Civilizing Nature: National Parks in Global Historical Perspective,
Volume 1 of Environment in History: International Perspectives, Berghahn Books, 2012.
• Christoph, Humrich and Klaus Dieter Wolf. From Meltdown to Showdown? Challenges and options for governance in the Arctic. (PRIF Reports, 113). Frankfurt am Main: Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung, https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-320709.
2011:
• Fujio Ohnishi, The Struggle for Arctic Regional Order: Developments and Prospects of Arctic Politics, Eurasia Border Review 5, No. 2 (2011).
• Christoph Humrich and KLaus Dieter Wolf. Vom Meltdown zum Showdown? Herausforderungen und Optionen für Governancein der Arktis. HSFK Report No. 4/2011 (Frankfurt am Main: Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung (HSFK), 2011).
• Jeppe Strandbjerg, "Introduktion," Politik (2011)
• Hannes Gerhardt, "The Inuit and Sovereignty: The Case of the Inuit Circumpolar Council and Greenland," Politik (2011).
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2012: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2011).
• Irina Valko, "Cold Waters, Hot Stakes: Systemic Geostrategic Analysis of International Relations in the Arctic Transborder Region," Master's Thesis, Institute of Political Science, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague, 2011.
• James Manicom, "Maritime Boundary Disputes in East Asia: Lessons for the Arctic," International Studies Perspectives 12, No. 3 (August 2011), 327–340.
• Kristian Åtland, "Russia's Armed Forces and the Arctic: All Quiet on the Northern Front?" Contemporary Security Policy 32, No. 2 (August 2011), 267-285.
• Ted L. McDormana, "From the Desk of the Editor-in-Chief," Ocean Development & International Law 42, No. 3 (August 2011), 280-287.
• Alexei Fenenko, "ROSSIIa I SOPERNIChESTVO ZA PEREDEL PRIPOLIaRNYKh PROSTRANSTV (РОССИЯ И СОПЕРНИЧЕСТВО ЗА ПЕРЕДЕЛ ПРИПОЛЯРНЫХ ПРОСТРАНСТВ)," Mirovaia e'konomika i mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia, No. 4 (April 2011), 16-29.
• "The Jomini of Non-Violence," Rethinking Security, February 22, 2011.
• "Sharp as a Modern Jomini," Small Wars Journal, February 17, 2011.
• Arctic Governance Task Force 2011, Melting Boundaries: Rethinking Arctic Governance. Faculty Advisors: Professor Vincent Gallucci, Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and Nadine Fabbi, Associate Director of Canadian Studies. Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington, Winter 2011.
2010:
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2011: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2010).
• Ross Coen, “If One Should Come Your Way, Shoot It Down”: The Alaska Territorial Guard and the Japanese Balloon Bomb Attack of World War II, Alaska History, Volume 25, No. 2, Fall 2010, 1-19.
• Conrad Schetter, "Ungoverned territories" – Eine konzeptuelle Innovation im "War on Terror," Geographica Helvetica Jg. 65 2010/Heft 3, 181-188.
• Rasmus Gjedssø Bertelsen, Structural, Environmental, and Political Conditions for Security Policy in the High North Atlantic: The Faroe Islands, Greenland, and Iceland, Strategic Insights, Volume 9, No. 12 (December 2010), 26-52.
• Heather N. Nicol, Canadian Arctic Security and Climate Change: Where Does Traditional Security Fit? Arctic 2010: Conference International Sur L'Arctique, Enjeux et équations géopolitiques au 21ème siècle, Lyon, 22-23 November 2010, http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/53/76/45/HTML/index.html.
• Paul Arthur Berkman, Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean: Promoting Co-operation and Preventing Conflict, Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) Whitehall Paper, 30 September 2010, http://www.rusi.org/publications/whitehall/• Henrik Jørgensen, Babysteps-Developing Multilateral Institutions in the Arctic, Center for Military Studies, University of Copenhagen, APSA 2010 Annual Meeting Paper, September 2010.
• Rasmus Gjedssø Bertelsen, United Nations University Institute of Advanced Studies, Climate Change, Independence and Microstate Security Policy: The Faroe Islands, Greenland and Iceland, APSA 2010 Annual Meeting Paper, September 2010
• Stephen M. Sachs, "Upcoming Events," Indigenous Policy Journal, July 2010, http://02b7adb.netsolhost.com/ipjblog/post/Upcoming-Events.aspx.
• Kristian Åtland, Security Implications of Climate Change in the Arctic, The Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (FFI) Report No 01097, 18 May 2010, http://rapporter.ffi.no/rapporter/2010/01097.pdf.
• Paul Cornish, Arms control tomorrow: the challenge of nuclear weapons in the twenty-first century, Chapter 12, in Robin Niblett, ed., America and a Changed World: A Question of Leadership (Wiley-Blackwell, May 2010).
• Christian Webersik, Climate Change and Security: A Gathering Storm of Global Challenges (Praeger, May 2010).
• Daryl Robbin, Arctic Defense Concerns: The Need to Reorganize United States Defense Structure to Meet Threats in a Changing Arctic Region, Joint Military Operations Department, Naval War College, Report No. A771525, 3 May 2010
• Mira Burria, World Trade Institute, University of Bern, "Digital Technologies and Traditional Cultural Expressions: A Positive Look at a Difficult Relationship," International Journal of Cultural Property 17, No. 1 (April 2010): 33-63.
• Harry Borlase, "Consistencies and Inconsistencies in the National Strategies of the Arctic Littoral States," University of Akureyri, Department of Law, Faculty of Law and Social Sciences, Master’s Program in Polar Law, March 2010.
• Shelagh D. Grant, Polar Imperative: A History of Arctic Sovereignty in North America (Douglas & McIntyre, 2010).
• Valerie Alia, The New Media Nation: Indigenous peoples and global communication (Berghahn Books, 2010).
• Martin Edwin Andersen, Peoples of the Earth: Ethnonationalism, Democracy & the Indigenous Challenge in "Latin" America, Lexington Books, 2010.
• Roger G. Barry, Distinguished Professor of Geography Scientist, National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, Review of Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom. The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic, Journal Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 42, No. 1 (February 2010).
• Stig Nøra, "Kina vil ha sin del av Nordområdene: Kina blir stadig mer aktive i nordområdene. Raskere transportruter til europeiske og amerikanske markeder, store olje- og gass-ressurser og kunnskapsbehov om klima-endringene gjør Arktis attraktiv for en fremvoksende stormakt som Kina," Dagens Perspektic, January 10, 2010.
• Peter F. Johnson, Arctic Energy Resources and Global Energy Security, Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 12, No. 2.
• Deheza, Elizabeth, The Dawn of a New Arctic Chessboard. Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy Thesis, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 24 May.
• Evan Ellis, New Frontiers in China-Latin America Space Cooperation, Security and Defense Studies Review, Vol. 10 (Spring-Summer 2010): 1533-2535.
2009:
• Arabinda Acharya, Targeting Terrorist Financing: International Cooperation and New Regimes (Contemporary Terrorism Studies), Routledge, 2009.
• Amy Fletcher, A look back at 2009 releases, Juneau Empire, December 10, 2009.
• James Manicom, “Climate Change, Extended Continental Shelf Claims and Maritime Territorial Disputes in the High Arctic,” ISSS-ISAC Conference 2009, Insecurity and Durable Disorder: Challenges to the State in an Age of Anxiety, October 19, 2009.
• Melissa Bert, Captain, USCG, John Chaddic, FBI, and Brian D. Perry, Colonel, USA, The Arctic in Transition: A Call to Action, Journal of Maritime Law & Commerce, October, 2009.
• J. S. Onésimo Sandoval and Gloria Ortiz, Toward a U.S. Analytic Latino Concept, Journal of Latino-Latin America Studies 3, No. 3 (2009).
• John Donihee, Land Claim Agreements and the North to 2030, Session No. 3 Conference Pager, 2030 North National Planning Conference, Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, June 1, 2009.
• Task Force on Arctic Sovereignty, Arctic Sovereignty and Governance, Winter 2008/2009, Canadian Studies Center, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington, Seattle.
• Martin E. Andersen, Indigenous Peoples, Democracy and a Revolution of the Fourth World, Organization of American States Democracy Project, 2009.
• Betsy B. Baker, Filling an Arctic Gap: Legal and Regulatory Possibilities for Canadian-U.S. Cooperation in the Beaufort Sea Vermont Law Review 34 (2009).
• Stephen McGlinchey, Rosie Walters, and Christian Scheinpflug, International Relations Theory, E-International Relations Publishing, 2009.
2008:
• Matthew Padilla, "Preparing for the Unknown: The Threat of Agroterrorism," Sustainable Development Law & Policy IX: 1 (Fall 2008), 55-56.
• Frank R. Spellman, Food Supply Protection and Homeland Security, Government Institutes: An Imprint of The Scarecrow Press (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2008).
• Kevin Howe, Panel Looks at Ramifications of Arctic Meltdown, Monterey Herald, December 10, 2008.
• L. Anne Enke, Accusations of Obama 'Climate Shame' & 'New Holocaust' End, Anne of Carversville, December 18, 2009
John R. Wunder and Kurt E. Kinbacher, Reconfigurations of Native North America: An Anthology of New Perspectives, Texas Tech University, December 2008.
• Mira Burri-nenova and Christoph Beat Graber, eds., Intellectual Property and Traditional Cultural Expressions in a Digital Environment, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2008.
• Christoph Beat Graber, Mira Burri-Nenova, eds., Intellectual Property and Traditional Cultural Expressions in a Digital Environment, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2008.
• Mira Burri-Nenova, The Long Tail of the Rainbow Serpent: New Technologies and the Protection and Promotion of Traditional Cultural Expressions, World Trade Institute, University of Bern Law School, November 25, 2008.
• Christopher A. Shaw, Five Ring Circus: Myths and Realities of the Olympic Games, New Society Publishers, 2008.
2007:
• Camilo Rodriguez, University of Oklahoma and Jeanine El Gazi, Ministry of Culture, Colombia, The Poetics of Indigenous Radio in Colombia, Media, Culture & Society 29, No 3 (2007)
• Mark A. Smith and Keir Giles, Russia and the Arctic: the 'Last Dash North', Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, Conflict Studies Research Centre, September 2007, https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/94472/07_Sept_Russ_Arctic.pdf.
• Aeneas R. Gooding, Agricultural Terrorism (Agroterror) and Escalation Theory, Master's Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, December 2007.
• Janet Mancini Billson and Kyra Mancini, Inuit Women: Their Powerful Spirit in a Century of Change. Rowman & Littlefield, 2007.
• Karen Guttieri, Jessica Piombo, Interim governments: Institutional Bridges to Peace and Democracy? U.S. Institute of Peace, 2007.
• Ritva Levo-Henriksson, Media and Ethnic Identity: Hopi Views on Media, Identity, and Communication (Indigenous Peoples and Politics), Routledge, 2007.
• LTC Irvin Lim Fang Jau, Comprehensive maritime domain awareness: an idea whose time has come, Working Papers 41, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Singapore October 16, 2007.
• The National Security Implications of Climate Change, Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight of the Committee on Science and Technology, House of Representatives, One Hundred Tenth Congress, First Session, September 27, 2007.
• Mark A. Smith and Keith Giles, "Russia and the Arctic: 'The Last Dash North," Shrivenham, UK: Defence Academy of the UK, Advanced Research and Assessment Group, Russan Series 7, no. 26 (September 2007).
• LTC Irvin Lim Fang Jau, Comprehensive maritime domain awareness: an idea whose time has come, Pointer: Journal of the Singapore Armed Forces 33, No. 3 (2007).
2000-2006:
• Aeneas R. Gooding, Agricultural Terrorism (Agroterror) and Escalation, Master’s Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, 2007.
• Philip Joseph, American Literary Regionalism in a Global Age, Louisiana State University Press, 2006.
LTC Trent A. Pickering, USAF, A Nuclear Dilemma: Korean War Déjà vu, Master's Thesis, US Army War College, March 2006.
• Ryan Petersen, Be Our Guest, but Please Don't Stay: A Comparison of US and German Immigration, Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law 14, No. 1 (2006-07).
• Alvin Benn, Producers Urged to Remain Vigilant: Government and Industry Focus on Agriterrorism, Alabama Farmers Co-op Cooperative Farming News, September 2005.
• David O. Meteyer, The Art of Peace: Dissuading China from Developing Counter Space Weapons, Master’s Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, June 2005.
• Christian Enemark, Disease Security in Northeast Asia: Biological Weapons and Natural Plagues, Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, 2004.
• Wade L. Huntley, Unthinking the Unthinkable: US Nuclear Policy and Asymmetric Threats, Strategic Insights, Vol. 3, No. 2 (February 2004), https://hdl.handle.net/10945/11213.
• Frederick J. Moll, The Legal & Technological Advantages of a North American Perimeter In the War Against Terrorism, Syracuse Science and Technology Law Reporter 2 (Spring 2004).
• Neil Blair Christensen, Inuit in Cyberspace: Embedding Offline Identities Online, Museum Tusculanum Press, 2003.
• Dean C. Alexander, Business Confronts Terrorism: Risks and Responses, University of Wisconsin Press, 2003.
• Dave McComb, Semantics in Business Systems: The Savvy Manager's Guide, Morgan Kaufmann, 2003.
• Frits Pannekoek, "Chapter 6: Cyber Imperialisme et marginalisation des autochtones au Canada," in Jean-Paul Baillargeon, ed., Transmission de la culture, petites sociétés, mondialisation (Les Presses de l'Université Laval, 2002), 85-103.
• Michael J. Mazarr, Information Technology and World Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.
• Maximilian C. Forte, Adelaide University (Australia), We are not Extinct: Caribbean Indigeneity and the Internet, Sincronía, Spring 2002, sincronia.cucsh.udg.mx/CyberIndigen.htm.
• Andrew E. Lieberman, Bringing Mayan Language and Culture Across the Digital Divide,” Academy for Educational Development, Profiles in Developmenty, TechKnowLogia, July-September 2002.
• Bonnie A. Nardi & Vicki L. O'Day, Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart, MIT Press, 2000.
• Valerie Alia, Un/Covering the North: News, Media, and Aboriginal People, University of British Columbia Press, 2000.
• Fiona Alice Miller, The Gender of Genetic Futures: The Canadian Biotechnology Strategy, Women, and Health: Proceedings of a National Strategic Workshop Held at York University, February 11-12, 2000, National Network on Environments and Women's Health (Canada), 2000.
1990-1999:
• Matiation, Nicole. "A Plea for Time: Northern Aboriginal Peoples Advocate for the Right to Communicate on the Information Highway. Master's Thesis, Department of Communication Studies, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, April 13, 1999.
• Magdalena A.K. Muir, Analysis of the Inuvialuit Final Agreement and marine protected areas under the Oceans Act, Report Prepared for the FJMC, International Energy, Environmental and Legal Services Ltd, Calgary, 1997.
• Joël Demay, The Persistence and Creativity of Canadian Aboriginal Newspapers, Canadian Journal of Communication 18, No 1 (1993).
• Freeman, Milton M.R., Eleanor E. Wein and Darren E. Keith, Recovering Rights: Bowhead Whales and Inuvialuit Subsistence in the Western Canadian Arctic, University of Alberta Press, Studies on Whaling No. 2, Edmonton, 1992.
• Joël Demay, Clarifying Ambiguities: The Rapidly Changing Life of the Canadian Aboriginal Print Media, The Canadian Journal of Native Studies XI, 1 (1991): 95-112.
Undated
• Wikipedia entries on: "Arctic Resources Race," "Broken-Backed War Theory," "Daniel Quinn," "Geopolitics of the Arctic," "Kendall Island Migratory Bird Sanctuary," "Michael N. Nagler," "Military History of Canada," "Muktuk," "Polar Seas," "Provinces and Territories of Canada" and "2008 Tibetan Unrest."
• Andrew E. Lieberman, "Taking Ownership: Strengthening Indigenous Cultures and Languages," LearnLink, Academy for Educational Development, Undated.
Conference, Quarterly and Annual Reports
• Conference Report: Interim Governments: Institutional Bridges to Peace and Democracy? Report author; written for Professors Jessica Piombo and Karen Guttieri, NPS (January 2006)
• Conference Report: Terrorism Financing & State Responses in Comparative Perspective. Report author; written for Professors Jeanne Giraldo and Harold Trinkunas, NPS (January 2005)
• Conference Report: Dissuasion in U.S. Defense Strategy. Co-written with Professor Peter R. Lavoy and Research Associate Christopher Clary, NPS(November 2004)
• Conference Report: Capabilities-Based Defense Planning: Building a 21st Century Force. Co-written with Professor James Russell and Research Assistant Lashley Pulsipher, NPS (November 2004)
• Monthly Reports to the Board of Directors of Northern Native Broadcasting, Yukon, 1998-1999. Report(s) author.
• Annual Report and Quarterly Reports to the Board of Directors of the Native Communications Society, 1995-1998. Report(s) author.
• Tetlit Gwich’in Council Annual Report, 1993. Report author.
Book Editing Services
• Innovation, Transformation, and War: Counterinsurgency Operations in Anbar and Ninewa Provinces, Iraq, 2005-2007, Stanford University Press, 2010 (Copy editing, formatting.)
• Female Suicide Terrorism: A Comparative Study of Three Conflict Regions, Master's Thesis, Department of National Security Affairs, December 2009. (Copy editing, formatting.)
• Peoples of the Earth: Ethnonationalism, Democracy, and the Indigenous Challenge in “Latin” America, Lexington Books, 2009 (Indexing, formatting.)
• Innovation in the Crucible of War: The U.S. Counterinsurgency Campaign in Iraq, 2005-2007, Doctoral Thesis, Department of War Studies, King’s College, University of London, October, 2009 (Copy editing and formatting.)
• Globalization and WMD Proliferation: Terrorism, Transnational Networks and International Security, Routledge, December 2007. (Copy editing.)
Grants, Fellowships and Editorial Projects
2020s:
• 2023: $4,200 from the 2022-23 Project on America’s New Arctic Policy and Canada’s New Arctic Policy to author a 30,000 word report on North America’s New Arctic Policies.
• 2022: $40,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-April 15, 2022.
• 2021: $80,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-December 31, 2021.
• 2020: $79,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-December 31, 2020.
• 2020: $24,000 from the Fulbright Foundation to serve as a visiting Fulbright Scholar, Polar Law Centre, University of Akureyri
2010s:
• 2019: $78,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-December 31, 2019.
• 2017: €32,400 from the Kone Foundation for research on “Tribal Buffer Zones and Regional Stability from the Polar to Oceanic Region: Understanding the Interface between Indigenous Homelands and Modern States, and the Foundations for Stable Borderlands”
• 2016: €32,400 from the Kone Foundation for research on “Tribal Buffer Zones and Regional Stability from the Polar to Oceanic Region: Understanding the Interface between Indigenous Homelands and Modern States”
• 2012: $25,380 from the Program for Culture and Conflict Studies (CCS) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) for categorizing and displaying data on the CCS website; editing various papers, including draft articles and reports; maintaining these data on the CCS website; updating the Index, Archive and Research pages; soliciting editing, and publishing articles in the Culture & Conflict Review; overseeing and editing the CCS book series; and assisting with various web, IT and editorial issues and projects.
• 2011: $20,820 from the Program for Culture and Conflict Studies (CCS) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) for categorizing and displaying data on the CCS website; editing various papers, including draft articles and reports; maintaining these data on the CCS website; updating the Index, Archive and Research pages; soliciting editing, and publishing articles in the Culture & Conflict Review; overseeing and editing the CCS book series; and assisting with various web, IT and editorial issues and projects.
• 2010: $24,000 to maintain, update, and post articles, course curricula, and departmental information to the websites of the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC), Department of National Security Affairs (NSA), and Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), and to edit the quarterly e-journal, Strategic Insights.
2000s:
• 2009: $40,950 to maintain, update, and post articles, course curricula, and departmental information to the websites of the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC), Department of National Security Affairs (NSA), and Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), and to edit the quarterly e-journal, Strategic Insights.
• 2008: $18,200.00 to maintain and enhance website materials in support of the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) including collecting, editing, and developing new content in support of RSEP on the website of the NPS Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) and National Security Affairs Department (NSA); to enhance reach-back capabilities of the site to better serve RSEP audiences; and to maintain up-to-date recommended online reading lists for various world regions and thematic issues for the Regional Security Education Program (RSEP), to be posted on the CCC website.
• 2007: $18,175 from the National Security Affairs Department (NSA) and the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to maintain and enhance website materials in support of the National Security Affairs (NSA) Department and the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) website including collecting, editing, and developing new content in support of the CCC website and maintaining online journal Strategic Insights (SIs).
• 2006: $30,000 from the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to assemble, produce, and disseminate research articles on the Naval Postgraduate School’s National Security Affairs Department and Center for Contemporary Conflict’s website; update and maintain current records on faculty biographies and NSA course descriptions; and update and maintain current online records for NSA’s Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) on the CCC/NSA website.
• 2005: $121,000 from Blanc + Otus Public Relations to author and edit the daily HP Competitive Intelligence in Action report.
• 2005: $24,000 from the IBM Applications on Demand (AoD) Group to provide technical editing service, primarily for software manuals.
• 2005: $10,000 to assemble, produce, and disseminate research articles on U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue; edit conference-related papers, working papers, and research materials following the CCC workshop on U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue; and maintain and produce web content on research topics supporting research on U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue.
• 2005: $6,500 to write an 8,000-word conference report and to prepare a transcript of the proceedings of the upcoming Center for Homeland Defense and Security workshop on Terrorism Finance and State Responses in Comparative Perspective.
• 2004: $70,000 from Hill and Knowlton Public Relations to author and edit the daily HP Competitive Intelligence in Action report.
• 2004: $51,000 from the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the Naval Postgraduate School (2004-05) to maintain and enhance website materials in support of the NPS Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) including collecting, editing, and developing new content in support of RSEP on the website of the NPS Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) and National Security Affairs Department (NSA).
• 2004: $35,000 from the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to manage the assembly, production and dissemination of research articles on Biological Weapons Threats to Homeland Security; and to write a conference report and edit conference papers for the CCC workshop on Dissuasion in the U.S. Defense Strategy.
1990s:
• 1999: $52,000 from Aboriginal Business Canada to produce a video profiling Aboriginal youth entrepreneurs in the Yukon and BC.
• 1999: $30,000 from the Tourism Marketing Fund to produce a television series pilot episode of Yukon Xtreme, an outdoor adventure show profiling extreme sports in the Yukon wilderness.
• 1999: $10,280 from the Yukon Territorial Government to provide media services for Team Yukon on the 1999 Team Canada trade mission to Osaka and Tokyo, Japan.
• 1999: $9,600 from the Trade and Investment Fund to represent NNBY at the Banff Television Festival and the Assembly of First Nation/Nexus aboriginal business trade show.
• 1999: $5,000 from the Aboriginal Healing Foundation to develop a community-based video project profiling women survivors of the residential school system.
• 1999: $1,200 from the Trade and Investment Fund to represent NNBY at the Prime Time television trade show in Ottawa.
• 1998: $218,000 from Telefilm Canada to produce the 1998 season of The No-Name Youth Show television series.
• 1998: $40,000 from the Government of the Northwest Territories (GNWT) to produce the Dene Weekly Perspective television news show.
• 1998: $25,000 from the GNWT to support Aboriginal language broadcasting on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1998: $7,500 from the Canada Council of the Arts to support publication of an aboriginal arts section in the Cabin Fever newspaper.
• 1997: $60,000 from the GNWT to introduce a television training program for Aboriginal youth, who contributed local segments to The No-Name Youth Show television series.
• 1997: $12,000 from the NWT Language Enhancement Program to produce a six-month Aboriginal language lesson series on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1996: $201,000 from Human Resources Development Canada to introduce a television training program for Aboriginal youth, who contributed local segments to The No-Name Youth Show.
• 1996: $12,000 from the GNWT’s Aboriginal Language Literacy Program to produce Aboriginal language lessons on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1996: $7,000 from the GNWT’s Language Enhancement Fund to produce a segment of the Spirit of Denendeh documentary television series called Teepee Talks, presenting stories told by Dene elders inside a traditional teepee around a campfire.
• 1996: $3,000 from the Cultural Enhancement Program to produce two television episodes for CNN International on northern issues.
• 1995: $252,000 from NorthwesTel to contribute to the production of the Dene Weekly Perspective television news show.
• 1995: $51,000 from the GNWT’s Department of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources to produce two one-hour television documentaries on saving energy in the home.
• 1995: $40,000 from the GNWT’s Cultural Enhancement Program to produce Aboriginal language lessons for broadcast on Television Northern Canada.
• 1995: $10,000 from the GNWT’s Aboriginal Language Literacy Program to produce Aboriginal language lessons on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1995: $5,000 from the GNWT’s Oral Traditions Program to record and broadcast traditional Dene love stories and songs.
• 1994: $28,000 from the NYU Center for War, Peace, and the News Media for research on post-Cold War news coverage of war and peace issues.
• 1993: $3,000 contract from the Tetlit Gwich’in Council of Fort McPherson, NWT to write their annual report, which involved spending one month in the community interviewing residents, elders, and tribal leaders, producing in a lengthy (60 pp) report on the first year of the Tetlit Gwich’in land-claim implementation.
• 1992: $45,000 from the GNWT’s Language Enhancement Program to introduce a new bilingual (Inuvialuktun/English) format for Tusaayaksat newspaper, becoming the only newspaper in Western Canada to publish in an aboriginal language.
• 1992: $43,000 research grant from the Canadian Institute for International Peace and Security (CIIPS) for “Decision-Making Structures in Land Claims Settlement Areas: Implications for Sovereignty and Security,” to better understand the dynamics of decision-making inside land claims settlement areas; to determine how co-management and devolution affect sovereignty-assertion and national security in the Arctic; and to engage in a comparative analysis of the Alaska, Inuvialuit and Inuit land claims settlements and their respective decision-making structures, using a case-study review in three settlement areas with additional comparison of James Bay and Northern Quebec settlements.
• 1992: $7,000 from the Inuvialuit/Government of Canada Joint Secretariat (a land claims implementation body) to research, write, design, and publish a pictorial history of the Inuvialuit bowhead harvest of 1991.
• 1991: $23,000 pilot project from the Language Enhancement Program to develop a bilingual format for the Inuvialuit newspaper, Tusaayaksat, and to train news translators fluent in Inuvialuktun dialects to speedily translate news stories for biweekly publication.
1980s:
• 1987: Institute on Global Conflict & Cooperation (1987-88): $12,000 predoctoral fellowship to conduct research on the strategic and theoretical foundations of nuclear strategy.
• 1986: Institute on Global Conflict & Cooperation (1986-87): $10,000 predoctoral fellowship to conduct research on the strategic and theoretical foundations of nuclear strategy (deferred).
• 1985: MacArthur Foundation (1985-86): $9,600 predoctoral international security fellowship from the MacArthur Foundation.
• 1983: Program on Nonviolent Sanctions in Conflict and Defense, Harvard University (1983): Research Assistant for Gene Sharp, the pioneering and innovative theorist of nonviolent strategic change, during the summer of 1983.
• 1983: Study of War Project (1983): Participated in a summer-long independent study under the tutelage of social psychologist and conflict resolution pioneer Herbert C. Kelman on the origins of war, utilizing Quincy Wright's classic tome as its primary text.
• 1983: Department of Government, Harvard University (1983): Research Assistant to professors John D. (Jack) Montgomery and Kent Calder at the International Dimensions of Land Reform project.
• 1982: Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Harvard University (1982): Research Assistant to professors Sallie Baliunas and John Raymond at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
• 1981: Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Harvard University (1981-82): Manager of the Michael Telescope Observatory, Harvard Science Center.
Breaking the Ice: From Land Claims to Tribal Sovereignty in the Arctic (Lexington Books, 2008)
• Professor Barry M. Gough, Wilfrid Laurier University, Choice Reviews Online, February 2009. Recommended: Graduate students, faculty, professionals. “This history of the Alaskan and Canadian arctic breaks new ground with its contemporary narration and analysis of the past three decades of political developments and with its rich findings based on documentary and Web research. Not a work in comparative history, this is more of a parallel treatment of government actions in regard to the norths of the two countries and the responses of the indigenous peoples ... to develop Native self-sufficiency and to solve the persistent problems of land claims by various First Nations, including Inuit, Inuvialuit, and Gwich'in. This large account will guide future researchers and government agents.”
• Shelagh D. Grant, Polar Imperative: A History of Arctic Sovereignty in North America (Douglas & McIntyre, 2010): "A detailed narrative of Inuit and northern Amerindians' struggle for control over their traditional lands and rights to self-government in Alaska and northern Canada."
• Mary Guss, University of Arizona (UA) NativeNet, "The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: Bibliography."
On Thin Ice: The Inuit, the State, and the Challenge of Arctic Sovereignty (Lexington Books, 2009)
• Matt Wiseman, "MattWiseman.ca," Department of History, Wilfrid Laurier University, May 31, 2013: "In arguing that history has not served the interests of Arctic peoples especially well, Barry Zellen’s On Thin Ice (2009) addresses contemporary Indigenous relations with academic integrity. Zellen’s examination focuses on Inuit peoples throughout the Arctic, and although it is not restricted to the Canadian North, it addresses issues of land claims and self-government specifically related to Canada’s past. ... On Thin Ice is a thorough examination of current issues facing both Canada’s federal government and the regions Indigenous populations. On Thin Ice is a broad synthesis that examines the current historiography of Indigenous relations in the Arctic."
• Ted L. McDorman, “From the Desk of the Editor-in-Chief,” Ocean Development & International Law 42, No. 3 (August 2011), 280-287: "This is a book about the politics, both domestic and regional, of the awakening of global interest in the Arctic ... a useful book for context."
• Martin Edwin Andersen, "A Must Read from the Troubador of the Land of the Midnight Sun," Amazon Reader Review, February 24, 2010: "5 Stars Out of 5. In On Thin Ice, Barry Scott Zellen poses tough questions about Canada's claims to a vast swathe of the soon-to-be hotly contested resource-rich Arctic. Zellen not only shows how much these depend on whether a collaborative and interdependent relationship can be successfully forged with Native peoples struggling to preserve fragile ecosystems and their own ethnic identity, but how conceptions of human security, tribal security and national security are inexorably tied together. Zellen's keen insight and painstaking research suggests that truths from the land of the midnight sun might help to illuminate and guide the struggles of indigenous peoples around the globe. On Thin Ice is a "must read" for the 21st century."
• Sarah Kate Milne, "Security on Ice: The Historical Transformation of Regional Security and International Society in the Arctic from the Cold War to the Twenty-First Century," Doctoral Thesis, Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Limerick, August 15, 2020, https://hdl.handle.net/10344/9525: "Although conflict-laden scenarios for the Arctic in the near-future need to be considered and addressed, not least for how to avoid them: the problem is that there have been too few attempts to critically and conceptually analyse these papers. Furthermore, they should be assessed utilizing realist theories of IR which many of the arguments are implicitly based on yet often defy the inherent logic which such theories are based on. What also seems to be forgotten is that there are various forms of realism and understandings of important concepts such as the balance of power within the realist tradition, yet these differences are rarely engaged with individually in the literature. Barry Scott Zellen’s (2009) On Thin Ice is one exception to the lack of Arctic texts written through an explicit realist theory of International Relations. Zellen utilizes Kenneth Waltz’s three levels of analysis (the individual, the state, and the international system) with the addition of a new "Fourth Image" to describe a tribal level. Zellen’s (2009) study reveals that instead of the Arctic being perceived as a passive receptor of external changes at the international level (third image), he demonstrates how, during the crucial post-Cold War transition of the 1990s, “national policies increasingly reflected the aspirations of the peoples of the North". Zellen’s adaptation of Waltz’s neo-realist level of analysis theory is useful for simultaneously examining top-down and bottom-up processes of a single event occurring at a given time."
Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic (Praeger, 2009)
• In great company (again!) In his chapter "Saltwater Geopolitics in North America" in the newly published volume, Widening the Scope of Environmental Policies in North America: Toward Blue Approaches (Palgrave MacMillan, 2017), Ed Atkins cites my 2009 work on Arctic geopolitics, Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom alongside such luminaries as Carter-administration diplomat and National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski; Obama-administration Secretary of State (and almost-President), Hillary Clinton; the legendary Arctic expert and kind-hearted advocate of Inuit rights, Terry Fenge; the Hegelian End-of-Historian and G.W. Bush-era member of the Policy Planning Staff of the U.S. State Department and long-time RANDite, Francis Fukuyama; former Prime Minister of Canada, Stephen Harper; pioneering Canadian peace researcher and environmental security theorist, Tad Homer-Dixon; the legendary and prolific strategic thinkers and writers, Robert D. Kaplan and Michael T. Klare; the pivotal and pioneering theorist of geopolitics, Halford J. Mackinder; the equally pivotal and pioneering naval strategist, theorist and admiral, Alfred T. Mahan; the widely-acclaimed offensive-realist theorist, John D. Mearsheimer; and the soft-power apostle and one-time Harvard University Nuclear Study (HUNS) Group member (and innovator of the "crystal ball effect" of nuclear weapons), Joseph Nye! In such august company, the only words that come to mind are, as the late John Belushi once eloquently put it: "Holy shit!" It's always such a great privilege (and greater surprise) to find out who I'm sitting near in the footnote and endnote sections of various books, chapters and articles - almost always by people I've never met but who I nonetheless want to personally thank: Thank you professor Atkins!
• Selected for "Special Focus: Good Winter Reads," Seniors Connect, Cleveland Public Library, 2012.
• Svein Vigeland Rottem, “Review of Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic,” Polar Record (December 2010): “Timely and intriguing. ... Zellen aims high and touches upon a wide range of highly interesting approaches on how to grasp and analyse the challenges and opportunities in the region. One could argue that this leads to a lack of analytical depth, but at the same time this wide scope offers its audience easy access, insight and plenty of food for thought into a wide range of pressing topics within the area of post cold war international relations. The book is a central contribution to the debate on the future of the Arctic.”
• Ken Atkinson, “Review of Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic,” British Journal of Canadian Studies, Volume 23, Number 2 (November 2010), 324: “The strength of the book lies in its treatment of the surge of activities by the circumpolar states in the 2000s in response to the predicted decline in sea-ice coverage. For example, the need for information on the position of the continental shelf has resulted in the present race by states to map the Arctic oceanbed, in a search for evidence to put before the International Seabed Authority (ISA) under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). This explains the recently updated Arctic policies of Canada and the US, and Russia’s dramatic flag-planting escapades at the North Pole in 2007. On these issues the book is commendably up-todate, and we are provided with over 50 pages of endnotes and bibliography (including many websites) for further reference.”
• Justin Klugh, “Book Review Wednesday: Books for the Cold at Heart,” The Green Life (Sierra Club), September 22, 2010: “The authors challenge some specific perspectives; most notably, yours. Should you be one of the many who don't live in Alaska, the frozen north is just that, and not much else. But for those who reside there, it's their neighborhood, their livelihood, and their home. A scientific look at just where global warming is going to leave us adds a foreboding sense of introspection for more than just those standing on the doorstep of climate change.”
• Kelley Crawford, Security and Defense Studies Review, Spring-Summer 2010: “Zellen deserves credit for providing another perspective on the Arctic’s situation where most of the literature is only concerned with the negative impacts of climate change.”
• Professor Stephanie Irlbacher-Fox, University of Toronto, Journal of the ARCTIC, Volume 63, Issue 2, June 2010: “Zellen has written a book that will make us think, and for that, his contribution should be lauded and welcomed as a source of important discussion among students and scholars of northern studies and northern policy makers alike.”
• Roger G. Barry, Distinguished Professor of Geography, Scientist, National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, Journal of Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, February 2010: “a timely and topical book… useful to residents of the north and scientists who work there, policy makers, and businesses with Arctic activities.”
• SciTech Book News (December 2009)
• Foreign Policy Association Editor's Pick (October 2009)
• Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the Environment (GNHRE), Virtual Research Repository, Theoretical and Conceptual Issues, Ecology: Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic (B.S. Zellen).
The Realist Tradition in International Relations: Foundations of Western Order, 4 Volumes (Praeger, 2011)
• SciTech Book News (December 2011): “Zellen (Naval Postgraduate School) has had an energetic passion for international relations theory for several decades, with a focus on Arctic security and circumpolar politics. Ambassador David T. Killion (US Ambassador to UNESCO) provides an introduction to this four-volume work, beginning with a reminiscence of his first course with Zellen at Wesleyan University in 1986, which included 'a veritable who's who of realism from the classical era up to the 20th century....' The foreword by Joel M. Ostrow (political science, Benedictine U.) points out that this treatise, for many, is long awaited. Ostrow explains that Zellen '...offers unique insights into the entire concept of the nation-state.' He continues, advising that reading this work '...is a massive journey...not for the faint of heart' and suggesting that students of international relations theory will be most interested in Zellen's development of constructive realism theory historically, philosophically, and politically. Zellen discusses the rise of the modern nation-state, explores (Ostrow's words) the 'application and misapplication of the ideas [of constructive realism],' and 'chronicles strategic thought during the age of total war' and reactions against the nation-state (as evidenced by the attacks of 9/11). The four volumes each have a focus and are titled as follows: v.1: State of Hope, v.2: State of Fear,, v.3: State of Awe, and v.4: State of Siege. Each volume is separately indexed.”
• Goodreads (December 2012): "Rated: 4 of 5 stars. Heavy reading. Zellen has a writing style that strikes a balance between scholar and poet as he traces Realism from Thucydides to Hitler. This first book in his four volume series is extremely informative, but excessively, unnecessarily wordy. It is also highly repetitive ..."
State of Doom: Bernard Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (Continuum Books, 2011)
• "Brodie and War" by Dr. B.A. Clayton, Amazon UK, May 29, 2012: "An excellent account of Bernard Brodie's writings and thinking. Brodie was an eminent expert on military and political strategy. He was one of the first to interpret the significance of nuclear weapons, and later to formulate the theory of limited nuclear war. His writings on Clausewitz are very useful for the student. Like the Prussian he emphasized the need for war to have a reasonable objective. For Brodie the question that Marshal Foch used to ask: 'De quoi s'agit-il' is crucial. It is a great pity that our politicians did not consider it before entering on the fiascoes in Iraq and Afghanistan. I met Bernard Brodie several times at IISS Conferences. He was a very humane and charming man." 5.0 out of 5 stars.
• Strategy & Defence Planning: Meeting the challenge of uncertainty, by Colin S. Gray (Oxford University Press 2014), p104, n25: "This professional challenge was well flagged and discussed in Bernard Brodie, War and Politics (New York: Macmillan, 1973), ch. 10. Three first-rate studies help explain Brodie’s professional position, located as he was between and among history, social science, and physical science. See Ken Booth, ‘Bernard Brodie’, in John Baylis and John Garnett, eds., Makers of Nuclear Strategy (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991), 19–54; Barry H. Steiner, Bernard Brodie and the Foundations of American Nuclear Strategy (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1991); and Barry Scott Zellen, State of Doom: Bernard Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (New York: Continuum, 2012)."
Also cited on p105, n33, and p190, n33: "Notwithstanding its title and argument in praise of economics as a science, there is little in Bernard Brodie’s brilliant 1949 argument in ‘Strategy as a science’ ... with which I disagree. Brodie’s argument, as it were from the ‘Stone Age’ of defence analysis in the late 1940s, needs to be read in the light of the argument in his last major work, War and Politics, esp. ch. 10. Barry Scott Zellen, State of Doom: Beyond Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (New York: Continuum, 2012), is essential."
• Theory of Strategy, by Colin S. Gray (Oxford University Press, 2018), p5, n11: "The nature and apparently tolerable character of our nuclear armed condition was explained in a flow of books, articles, and studies in the late 1950s and 1960s. It would appear to be the case that just about everything that needed to be understood about nuclear dangers in statecraft was expressed at that time. However, the fundamentals of nuclear deterrence probably do need to be repeated loudly for new generations. The wisest of the wise among the first generation of nuclear-weapon theorists was undoubtedlty Bernard Brodie. See, particularly, his final book, <i>War and Politics</i> (New York: Macmillan, 1973). It is worth noting that Brodie attracted two fine, detailed biographies: Barry H. Steiner, Bernard Brodie and the Foundations of American Nuclear Strategy (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1991) and Barry Scott Zellen, State of Doom: Bernard Brodie, the Bomb, and the Birth of the Bipolar World (New York: Continuum, 2012)."
• The Clausewitz Home Page, Clausewitz Bookstore: New Releases on Clausewitz.
The Art of War in an Asymmetric World: Strategy for the Post-Cold War Era (Continuum Books, 2012):
• In great company - excerpts from The Art of War in an Asymmetric World were cited in Telos’ online journal, Teloscope – right after Sir Thomas Hobbes himself, three quotes before Kissinger, and seven before Carl Schmitt (three of my all-time favorite realists)! As Andrew M. Wender writes:
A more encompassing historical and geographic, and for that matter, metaphysical perspective might suggest that, in fact, ours is a fundamentally "asymmetric world," wherein struggle over such intimate forms of human identity as those that Barry Scott Zellen terms "tribal" and "ethereal" is much the norm. As Zellen asserts: "... modern states are neither eternal nor unchanging. They are dynamic and evolving. ... Indeed, across much of the world, there may truly be no state system at all, despite its prominence in the minds of theorists dating back so many centuries -- but instead, in its lofty place, is an ethereal but nonetheless lasting interconnection that varies greatly by region, shadows cast upon the wall of mind deep inside Plato's cave -- mere glimpses of an overarching order, amidst a kaleidoscopic amalgam of organic and synthetic parts, each doing what they do best, surviving in a maddeningly complex world -- for as long as they can."
A vital question, therefore, is how the political might be understood as animated and inspired by the theological, in ways that are justly reflective of the asymmetrical contours and contestations of human difference; this, as supposed to the artificial superimposition of violent, ostensibly symmetrical order.
Check out Andrew M. Wender’s “Asymmetry and the Reimagining of Political Theology,” Teloscope (March 8, 2017), at: http://www.telospress.com/asymmetry-and-the-reimagining-of…/
• The LSE School of Economics and Political Science Blog, August 18, 2013: "Barry Scott Zellen explores how the U.S. has had to adapt to the new asymmetrical world of conflict that followed the end of the Cold War and that culminates with today’s global jihadist movements. Featuring the works of key theorists such as John Arquilla, Thomas P.M. Barnett, Arthur K. Cebrowski, and David Ronfeldt, this book is to be recommended to students of strategic studies willing to bear with this dense study from beginning to end, writes Andrew McCracken: 'The Art of War in an Asymmetric World – or AWAW, to use the sort of acronym so beloved of the armed forces – is both a history of military planning in the US over the past few decades and a prescription aimed at what the author considers to be its flaws. Barry Scott Zellen writes: “indigenous tribes and the most modern of states are waging a new and very asymmetric kind of conflict, one that is redefining the very building blocks of world order.” In AWAW, Zellen synthesises the academic discourse surrounding America’s military strategy over the past few decades. Inevitably for such a study, the war on terror looms large throughout; subject of the book’s central chapter, the conflict also informs the entirety of AWAW. ... The work itself is an esoteric tome unlikely to appeal to readers unfamiliar with the field. Typically for strategic studies, familiarity with the works of Sun Tzu, Clausewitz and lesser theorists, in addition to a grounding in how the war on terror has unfolded, is taken as a given. Indubitably, this is not Contemporary Warfare for Dummies.'"
Read more: here.
State of Recovery: The Quest to Restore American Security After 9/11 (Bloomsbury 2013):
• Book Review of State of Recovery in Journal of Terrorism Research (JTR), Volume 5, Issue 2 (May 2014), p59-61. Reviewed by Richard English, Wardlaw Professor of Politics in the School of International Relations, and Director of the Handa Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence (CSTPV), at the University of St Andrews:
"‘Technology to the Rescue.’ Barry Scott Zellen’s intriguing and impressive new book examines the deployment of technological innovation by the United States, as it has attempted to ensure its security from threat after the atrocity of 9/11. In the words of Zellen’s own manifesto here: ‘State of Recovery examines the numerous efforts by technologists and homeland security policy makers dedicated to restoring security and ameliorating the insecurity felt after the attacks more than a decade ago.’ It is a fascinating account. The author considers the dramatic US rise in technology spending, both public and private, since 2001; he assesses the remarkable innovation evident in recent years in biometrics, in information security, and in protection regarding aviation, underground travel, sporting events, food, and the mail system, as well as the reorganization (with the Department of Homeland Security and so forth) of US structures of prevention; he ranges widely over non-terrorist dangers, such as those posed by hostile states (North Korea, Iran), by illegal migration into America, and by increasing border violence. Zellen is an admirably prolific and highly intelligent scholar. Here, he recognizes that some measure of insecurity and threat will prove residual. And some very good points are made. One of the repeatedly important lessons which emerges from this thoughtful book is the constant need for ensuring intra- and inter-state coordination, cooperation, and partnerships (together with organizational streamlining). Regrettably, it is an insight more easily stated than it is adhered to in effective manner. No book is flawless. Zellen does not sustainedly explore the degree to which some of the USA’s main counter- terrorist efforts in recent years (especially in relation to Iraq) have actually generated more intense kinds of terrorist threat than had previously existed. Relatedly, he is better on the innovative technological brilliance involved in, for example, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles than he is in considering the possible blowback costs which the USA and its allies are likely to have to pay for drones’ lethal use. Here, as so often, there can be a seeming disjunction between the extraordinarily high levels of technical and technological sophistication shown by counter-terrorist states, and the sometimes crass naivety of states’ political and social approaches to the causation and likely dynamics of enduring conflict. Zellen has interviewed some fascinating people involved in the world which he delineates. At times, I felt that he might have interrogated their assumptions and claims rather more stringently than he does, in light of other–corroborating or sceptical–sources. So the chapter on nuclear terrorism might perhaps be justified in its somewhat anxious tone; but this would have seemed more persuasive to me had Zellen engaged with the less alarmist arguments of scholars such as Michael Levi (which he does not). One of the things that Zellen suggests is that ‘both the terrorists as well as those who fight them are finding that the internet has become a theatre of war unto itself ’. …"
Read the full review: here.
• Book Review of State of Recovery in British Association for American Studies' U.S. Studies Online Forum for New Writing. Reviewed by Dafydd Townley, September 2, 2015.
The terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre on September 11th 2001 was a watershed moment in national security in the United States. ... The Bush Administration’s reaction was the formation of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in January 2003 with a budget of $29.4 billion as part of a massive federal government reshuffle. This led to what Barry Scott Zellen describes as ‘an unprecedented surge in governmental investment in new technologies for homeland security.’(9) It is this government investment in the technology industry and the industry’s subsequent impact on the maintenance of national security that is the subject of Zellen’s publication. State of Recovery highlights in particular where government-led initiatives to secure the United States’ borders were influenced by corporate innovation through governmental funding and by developments within the consumer market since the Twin Towers attack. This is exemplified by the increase in efficiency and speed of development of consumer items such as mobile phones and tablets. As the war on terror became more technological, the military demand for greater technological advances became exponential, as did the funding. The increasing use of technology by both the US government and armed forces, and terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda, leads Zellen to declare that ‘the internet has become a theatre of war unto itself.’(P24)
The book comprises of a number of essays written by Zellen which deal with the developments and innovation within information technology after the attacks on the World Trade Centre in 2001. It addresses the issues faced by the US government after 9/11 to ensure the safety of the general public against terrorist attacks, and examines the attempts made by the US to make sure that any future hostilities occur as far away as possible from the US mainland. This is an impressive piece of scholarship by a recognised authority in his field. Zellen asserts that any successful national security program has to be as a result of successful partnerships, and it is a theory that is developed and supported by a wealth of information. The co-operation of government departments and technological corporations is illustrated throughout. The transformation of protection against online identity fraud is an example of this: already being developed by online security firms prior to 9/11, the necessity of restricting terrorist movement post 9/11 led to massive funding from the US government into the venture as part of the DHS’s Real ID Program. The program, part of the Real ID Act was an effort, says Zellen, to close the ‘revolving door to terror’. (33) It is Zellen’s examination of such juxtapositions that make this monograph such a unique and important contribution to the study of national security. ... State of Recovery is a remarkable piece of scholarship that fills a gap within the study of national security. It does not examine in detail the events or politics that led to the creation of the Bush Doctrine in the Post /11 era, rather it examines the role that information technology had in helping the Bush and Obama administrations realize their foreign policy, in particular its role in the Global War On Terror. It is an excellent supplement to more conventional national security studies, in particular highlighting the effect of the partnership between the federal government and technological corporations had on foreign policy, and the subsequent collateral effect on the consumer technological market.
Read the full review: here
The Fast-Changing Arctic: Rethinking Arctic Security for a Warmer World (University of Calgary Press, 2013):
• Betty Galbraith, Science Librarian and Instruction Coordinator, Washington State University in Northeastern Naturalist, Vol. 20, Issue 4, B10 (December 2013):
"Many have heard about the plight of the polar bear due to the shrinking of sea ice, but few have considered the other repercussions of global warming and the melting of sea ice in the Arctic. Luckily, circumpolar Arctic organizations, governments, and peoples have been considering this for many years. This book is a collection of essays on just these topics: sovereignty, strategic defense, national and environmental security, and global economics. Some of these essays consider the probable rush to grab territories, and to exploit new transportation routes and newly accessible natural resources. For example, a Russian flag was planted on the seabed of the North Pole in 2007. Corporations and countries are already positioning themselves to exploit oil and gas reserves currently under Arctic ice. This raises several questions: How can the Arctic nations peacefully manage these conflicting demands? What about the demands of non-Arctic nations that want a part of the spoils? Who will have the right to create and enforce environmental standards and rules? How will indigenous peoples fare? This is an excellent collection of essays from knowledgeable people. It is a must for anyone interested in geopolitics, international relations, and northern studies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels."
BioOne members may read the entire review here.
• Kristian Atand, of the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment, in The Journal of Polar Research (Vol 33, Feb 2014):
"How will the changes currently taking place in the Arctic affect the future nature of interstate relations in the region? To what extent, and how, will the decline in summer and winter sea ice in the Polar Basin lead to changes in the pattern of human activity in the Arctic? How do the Arctic states approach the region and each other, and to what extent are their Arctic strategies compatible? Will the Arctic become an arena of jurisdictional disputes and heightened military tension, or will it become a region of cooperation and prosperity? These are among the core questions addressed in The Fast-Changing Arctic: rethinking security for a warmer world, edited by Barry Scott Zellen. ... Zellen is a senior fellow at the Institute of the North, Alaska, where he directs the Fast-Changing Arctic project, which focuses on the geopolitical and other impacts of changes taking place in the circumpolar Arctic. Having worked on related issues since the end of the Cold War, as a journalist, editor and researcher, he has established himself as a prolific writer on Arctic and northern affairs. He is the author or editor of about 10 books and has several more on the way. ... The current book, which is a 400-page anthology featuring contributions by 20 authors, revisits many of the issues that were raised in Zellen’s monograph, Arctic doom, Arctic boom: the geopolitics of climate change in the Arctic, published in 2009. At the same time, the current book widens the perspective and adds new dimensions to the analysis. Overall, it makes for an enjoyable read. The 16 chapters of this book are organized into three main parts, “Arctic climate change: strategic challenges and opportunities”, “cooperation and conflict: paths forward” and “regional perspectives”. The book also includes a brief foreword by Alaska’s Lieutenant Governor, Mead Treadwell, a concluding chapter by the editor (“Stability and security in a post-Arctic world: towards a convergence of indigenous, state, and global interests at the top of the world”) and an eight-page afterword by University of Alaska professor, Lawson Brigham. ... Zellen has done a great job in assembling the contributions and presenting them for a wider audience in the form of a highly accessible anthology. The book is well structured, most of the relevant topics and perspectives are represented, and all of the chapters add to our understanding of the increasingly complex dynamics at play in the northern part of the globe."
Read more: here.
• Mike Cowton, in the February 25, 2014 edition of Eco Travel Guide, online at: http://www.ecotravelguide.eu/fast-changing-arctic/
REVIEW: THE FAST-CHANGING ARCTIC: Rethinking Arctic Security for a Warmer World, edited by Barry Scott Zellen (University of Calgary Press):
"Sought by explorers for centuries as a possible trade route, the Northwest Passage sea route traverses the Arctic Ocean, following the northern coast of North America via waterways amidst the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. and connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. First navigated by Roald Amundsen in 1903–1906, up until 2009, the Arctic pack ice prevented regular marine shipping throughout much of the year. However, climate change has reduced the pack ice, with summer Arctic sea-ice coverage shrinking by over a third in the past three decades. This shrinkage has seen the waterways becoming more navigable. That said, contested sovereignty claims over the waters have complicated shipping through the region. In his foreword, ‘Witnessing an Arctic Renaissance’, Mead Treadwell, Lieutenant Governor, State of Alaska, writes that ‘for Arctic states across the globe, the accessible Arctic Ocean presents opportunities of a lifetime, with energy resources, minerals, tourism and shipping potential making this increasingly accessible region a classic emerging market’. The planting of a Russian flag on the Arctic sea-bed beneath the North Pole in August 2007 is symbolic of the high stakes involved as the Arctic opens up to oil and gas exploration, shipping, tourism and increased human habitation. Much has been written on the climatological and ecological stresses on the region, with little addressed on the military, defence, strategic and macro-economic opportunities associated with polar thaw. Here, international scholars and military professionals explore the strategic consequences of sea-ice decline. Timely reading indeed, on sovereignty and territorial disputes, oil and gas exploration, fishing, coastguard responsibilities and Arctic tourism."
Read more here.
• Valur Ingimundarson, of the University of Iceland, "Geostrategic Visions for the Arctic," in the March 2014 edition of H-Net's (Humanities and Social Sciences Online's) H-Diplo, online at: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=40301
"... Edited by Barry Scott Zellen, who has written extensively on Arctic geopolitics, The Fast Changing Arctic contains contributions from established and junior scholars as well as military and coast guard professionals ... together, they deal with a wide array of Arctic topics, such as military and defense, governance and regional management, Arctic strategies, environmental politics, maritime and shipping developments, and sovereignty and legal concerns. ... Zellen analyzes the U.S. military regional commands in Arctic areas, that is, the Northern Command (NORTHCOM), Pacific Command (PACOM), and European Command (EUCOM) areas. He asserts that EUCOM should, in the future, be responsible for Arctic defense since the potential threat does not emanate from China, whose interests in the region are largely economic in nature, but from Russia. As he puts it: “Proximity to an awakening Russian bear, and experience in taming its more aggressive instincts, will be an important key to a secure and peaceful North” (p. 244). An important part of such Western regional defenses--he maintains--has historically been through close ties to Greenland and Iceland. ... In his treatment of future Arctic developments, Zellen conjures Cold War utopian and dystopian visions for the Arctic. He argues that an “Arctic Spring” has the potential to transform the Arctic Basin “much like the Prague Spring promised to open up and integrate Czechoslovakia with the West” (p. 343). The hope it expressed, he continues--while temporarily crushed in 1968--was realized with the Velvet Revolution of 1989. In addition, he stresses the empowerment of Arctic indigenous peoples and sees an independent Greenland as a real possibility. In fact, the editor--who is steeped in a realist tradition--is the only contributor prepared to project Manichean Cold War schemes onto the Arctic in his assessment of future strategic developments. Sometimes, he goes way too far in his analogies--the discourse on the “Arctic Spring” and the “Prague Spring” is a case in point. But he is also willing to contemplate other cooperative scenarios and transformative and empowering possibilities for the Arctic indigenous peoples. Thus, despite the hyperbolic language, the Arctic is, in the end, not seen as a geostrategic fixture, as was the case during the Cold War, but as a region open to different interpretations and outcomes, including emancipatory potentials."
Read the whole review here.
• Nikolas Sellheim, Faculty of Law, University of Lapland, Review of The Fast-Changing Arctic in Polar Record, published on 13 March 2014 by Cambridge University Press:
"The warming trends in the Arctic have been widely documented and seem to have found rather unison acceptance among climate scientists. Secondary effects of this trend are reflected in the political developments in the region, albeit with differences in interpretation as to which path political developments will tread: conflict or cooperation? It is thus a matter of ‘security’ in the region which must be related to climate change. And this is what The Fast-changing Arctic – rethinking Arctic security for a warmer world tries to achieve. The book is subdivided into four sections, ‘Arctic climate change: strategic challenges and opportunities’, ‘Cooperation and conflict: paths forward’, ‘Regional perspectives’, and ‘Concluding observations’. ... there are several contributions in this volume which justify the ‘rethinking’-element of the book. ... It is thus to conclude that The Fast-changing Arctic provides many new perspectives on a traditional understanding of Arctic security with a dominant state-centred, North American focus."
Read the review here.
• John D. Jacobs, Honorary Research Professor, Department of Geography, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, in the Journal of Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (May 2014):
"The Fast-Changing Arctic is more about the geopolitics of the Arctic than the rapidly evolving environmental changes taking place there. However, anyone who does research in the Arctic must be sensitive to the politics at some level and will be interested in policy matters that can be informed by science and ultimately will affect the future state of the Arctic environment. This book is a collection of 16 substantive chapters arranged under the headings Arctic climate change: strategic challenges and opportunities, Cooperation and conflict: paths forward, Regional perspectives, and Concluding remarks. The 17 authors encompass a range of relevant experience and expertise, and include academics, military and diplomatic professionals, and journalists. None appear to be from indigenous Arctic communities, although several of the chapters deal with emerging indigenous governance and power-sharing issues, particularly in Alaska, Canada, and Greenland. There are extensive notes and references, numerous maps and other figures, a comprehensive index, and information about the contributing authors. Most of the chapters have appeared previously as articles in foreign policy and international law journals dating between 2009 and 2011, but they provide good background to things to come. Arctic warming and associated diminishing sea ice and other physical and ecological effects are sketched in several chapters, with reference to model projections for future change. That the decline in seasonal sea-ice extent has outpaced most model projections is noted and becomes a source of some urgency, as in Alun Anderson’s statement, “action to look after the Arctic must accelerate too.” ....The Fast-Changing Arctic is a comprehensive treatment of current Arctic policy issues by authors with diverse backgrounds and perspectives. While the book lacks some of the continuity of a focused work by a single author, the editor has succeeded in organizing the various contributions into a coherent whole. This book joins a growing literature on politics, resource development, and environmental issues in the Arctic, and should be of interest to anyone who has an interest in the future of the region."
Read the full review: here
• Miloš Barták, "Review of The fast-changing Arctic. Rethinking Arctic security for a warmer world, Barry Scott Zellen (ed.)," Czech Polar Reports: An Interdisciplinary Journal 4, No. 1 (2014), Masaryk University, Brno.
"A general feature of the book is that it brings a pragmatic view on the consequences of the global warming of the atmosphere, and the sea ice decline in the northern hemisphere in particular. In contrast to many books on the market that focus on recent climatological and environmental changes happening in the Arctic ocean, The fast-changing Arctic overviews the aspects of ongoing transformation of the Arctic with main emphasis given to tourism impact, increased availability of mineral sources, fishing industry, human habitation, economic, military, and defense consequences. Among the many topics presented in the book, the likely effects of increased shipping through the Northwest Passage and the Northern Sea Route are brought into focus. The book is not a typical scientific study; it is rather a platform for several professionals and academicians who comment on history and possible future scenarios of environment, geopolitical and security issues in the Arctic. ... As regards security in the Arctic region, the majority of the co-authors stress the importance of dialogue and collaboration between countries involved in ship transportation in coastal Arctic seas that are expected to be more open in future. In one of the concluding chapters, L. W. Brigham concludes that "The Arctic will become a shipping superhighway," which again supports the idea of co-operation and a necessity for coordination of the exploitation of traffic routes in Arctic seas. The book can be recommended to professionals in the field of international relations, geodemography, strategic studies, and members of international organizations that have Arctic issues in their scope."
Read the full review: here
Culture, Conflict and Counterinsurgency (Stanford University Press, 2014):
• Ohio State Professor Peter Mansoor's Review of Culture, Conflict, and Counterinsurgency in the July 2014 edition of H-Diplo, H-Net Reviews, http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=41583:
"Culture, Conflict, and Counterinsurgency is a collaborative effort by ten scholars and military practitioners to explain the criticality of cultural knowledge and awareness in the messy small wars of the twenty-first century, in particular the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan. The product of a two-year study sponsored by the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterrey, California, this volume seeks to clarify the importance of cultural understanding to national security and foreign policy, the theory underpinning cultural analysis, practical difficulties involved in data collection and analysis, and how cultural issues have impacted recent military adventures in the Middle East and South Asia. Contributors include cultural and social anthropologists, historians, and military officers with both academic and field experience in anthropology and counterinsurgency warfare. The editors conclude that culture matters a great deal in conflict, and the United States and its allies can either make the effort to understand its impact on warfare or suffer the unhappy consequences of their ignorance. They optimistically conclude that Afghanistan can still turn out successful for the United States and its Afghan allies provided they undertake a “significant course change reflecting cultural nuances” (p. 3). Although this assessment may be overly optimistic given the impending departure of U.S. and NATO forces from Afghanistan, this book is highly recommended for scholars, military practitioners, and government officials involved in studying or crafting policies concerning irregular warfare in the twenty-first century. The volume is divided into two general sections, the first focusing on theory and methodology and the second on practice in the context of the war in Afghanistan. The first section will appeal primarily to scholars, although Alexei Gavriel’s chapter on the creation and use of cultural and ethnographic intelligence by military forces will spark both interest among military intelligence professionals and no doubt a great deal of angst among sociologists and anthropologists. The discussion of culture and the war in Afghanistan in the second part of the book will be of more interest to the generally informed reader. ... The editors conclude, “In the history of recent counterinsurgency efforts, the impact of cultural understanding on military operations cannot be underestimated” (p. 252). Perhaps the impact cannot be underestimated, but it can be ignored. There are a number of military officers and self-appointed counterinsurgency pundits who are trying to do just that in their quest to return the focus of the U.S. military to fighting state-on-state wars. As U.S. forces withdraw from the conflicts spawned by the terrorist attack on the United States on September 11, 2001, Americans and their military leaders seem united by a common desire to forgo any more of these messy, troop-intensive counterinsurgency conflicts. Unfortunately, in our haste to forget the history of the past decade-plus of warfare in the Middle East and South Asia, we may also jettison the very lessons—among them the importance of culture in determining the outcome of these conflicts—that may help future generations avoid the pitfalls that plagued too many U.S.-led military operations in the past. The editors and contributors to this volume make a convincing case that culture matters a great deal in the outcome of insurgencies and counterinsurgency warfare. Although this book has probably come too late to change the outcome of the conflict in Afghanistan, perhaps it is timely enough to educate the next generation of military leaders, who most certainly will see this type of war again."
Read the full review here. Printable Version: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=41583.
Scholarship Cited In:
2024:
• Vera Solovyeva. "Climate Change in Arctic and Indigenous Peoples: Challenges and Solutions." Ocean and Coastal Law Journal 29, no. 2 (2024): 317.
• Torbjørn Pedersen and Beate Steinveg, "Russia's Clashing Ambitions: Arctic Status Quo and World‐Order Revision," Politics and Governance, Vol 12 (January 2024), Special Issue on Arctic Regional Governance: Actors and Transformations, https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.7311.
• Basil Germond. Seapower in the Post-modern World. McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2024.
• Olena Dovgal, Tetiana Borko, Nataliia Miroshkina, Hanna Surina, Dmytro Konoplianyk, "Circular economy as an imperative for sustainable development," Scientific Bulletin of Mukachevo State University (Series: Economics), Vol. 11, No. 1 (2024), 19-28, doi: 10.52566/msu-econ1.2024.19.
• James Agbodzakey. "Consensus in Collaborative Governance." In Collaborative Governance Primer: An Antidote to Solving Complex Public Problems (Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2024), 91-101.
• Paula Kivimaa, Mikael Hildén, Timothy R. Carter, Claire Mosoni, Samuli Pitzén and Marja Helena Sivonen. "Evaluating Policy Coherence and Integration for Adaptation: The Case of EU Policies and Arctic Cross-border Climate Change Impacts." Climate Policy, April 5, 2024, 1–17, https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2024.2337168.
• Sopheak Chann, Alice Beban, Amanda Flaim, Timothy Gorman and Long Ly Vouch. Disorientations: The Political Ecology of "Displacing" Floating Communities from Cambodia's Tonle Sap Lake, Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography, Vol. 0, No. 0 (2024), 1-25, ISSN 0066-4812, doi: 10.1111/anti.1302.
• Benjamin T. Johnson. "This World of Tomorrow: Sociotechnical Imaginaries of Security in the Canadian Arctic," Critical Studies on Security, Vol. 12, No. 1 (2024) (online, 21 Jan 2024), DOI:10.1080/21624887.2024.2304413.
• Marc Jacobsen, Ulrik Pram Gad and Ole Wæver, eds. Greenland in Arctic Security: (De)securitization Dynamics under Climatic Thaw and Geopolitical Freeze. University of Michigan Press, 2024.
• Zafer Yilmaz. "PYD/YPG Terör Örgütünün Sinemacılık Hevesi: İkincil Kaynak Antropolojik İstihbarat," İstihbarat Çalışmaları ve Araştırmaları Dergisi-İÇAD (2024), https://doi.org/10.29228/icad.24.
2023:
• Klaus Dodds and Jen Rose Smith, "Against Decline? The Geographies and Temporalities of the Arctic Cryosphere," The Geographical Journal 189, No. 3 (September 2023), 388-397, https://doi.org/10.1111/geoj.1248.
• Arushi Singh, "Russia's Nuclear Strategy: Changes or Continuities?" Journal of Advanced Military Studies (JAMS), Vol. 14, No. 2 (2023), 34-48.
• Paul A. Adekunte, Matthew N. O. Sadiku, and Janet O. Sadiku, "Food Defense An Introduction," International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (IJTSRD), Vol. 7, No. 6 (November-December 2023), 652-659.
• Ekaterina S. Purgina and Andrey Menshikov, Environmental Imaginaries of the Arctic in the 21st Century Travel Writing, Changing Societies & Personalities 7, No. 4 (2023), 174–189.
• Arushi Singh, "Russia's Nuclear Strategy: Changes or Continuities," Marine Corps University Press, Journal of Advanced Military Studies, Vol 14, No. 2 (2023): 34-48, https://www.muse.jhu.edu/article/909030.
• Tatiana Chudakova, Cassandra Hartblay, and Maria Sidorkina, "A Chto Sluchilos'?: Ethnographies of Holding It Together," The Russian Review, December 5, 2023 (early online access), https://doi.org/10.1111/russ.12583
• Ekaterina Zmyvalova, "Indigenous Peoples of Russia During the War Time," Section V: Cooperation and Conflict, Arctic Yearbook 2023, Lassi Heininen, ed., Thematic Network (TN) on Geopolitics and Security of the University of the Arctic, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi.
• Andrey K. Krivorotov, БУДУЩАЯ АРКТИКА: РАСКОЛОТАЯ, «ЗЕЛЕНАЯ » И МАЛОЛЮДНАЯ? (ARCTIC OF THE FUTURE: SPLIT, “GREEN” AND DESERTED?), ГОСУДАРСТВЕННАЯ ПОЛИТИКА В АРКТИКЕ (УДК) 332.1, АРКТИКА 2035: актуальные вопросы, проблемы, решения № 4 (16) 2023, DOI 10.51823/74670_2023_4_4.
• Saniyat A. Agamagomedova, "Customs Control in the Arctic Zone of the Russian Federation," Социально-Экономическое Развитие/Social and Economic Development, Арктика и Север/Arctic and North, No. 52. (2023), 5–16, doi: 10.37482/issn2221-2698.2023.52.5.
• Lassi Heininen, "Pioneering Models for an Open Discussion and Northern Knowledge-Building – The Case Studies of Calotte Academy and Northern Research Forum," Section IV: Knowledge and Science (Briefing Note), Arctic Yearbook 2023, Lassi Heininen, ed., Thematic Network (TN) on Geopolitics and Security of the University of the Arctic, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi.
• Kévin de Blasiis, Benoit Mauvieux, Charlotte Elsworth-Edelsten, Thierry Pezé, Romain Jouffroy, and Rémy Hurdiel, "Photoperiod Impact on a Sailor’s Sleep-Wake Rhythm and Core Body Temperature in Polar Environment," Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Vol. 30, No. 4 (2019), 343-50.
• Adele Buckley, "Destabilization of the Arctic." Journal of Autonomy and Security Studies 7, no. 2 (2023), 128-143.
• Seyedmohammad Seyedi Asl, "21. Yüzyılda Kuzey Kutbu'nun Jeopolitik Konumu ve Oluşan Yeni Jeopolitik Ekseni (Rusya, Çin ve ABD) / Geopolitical Position of the Arctic in the 21st Century and the Formation New Geopolitical Axis (Russia, China, and USA)," Ekonomi İşletme Siyaset ve Uluslararası İlişkiler Dergisi (JEBPIR) Vol 9, No. 2 (2023), 229-246.
• Christian Enemark, Disease Security in Northeast Asia: Biological Weapons and Natural Plagues, Canberra Papers on Strategy and Defence, No. 156, Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, 2023.
• Robin D. Usher, "Pilot Study of Reliability and Validity of a Stakeholder Analysis System for Health Intervention Planning for Inuit of Kalaallit Nunaat." PhD Dissertation, The Chicago School of Professional Psychology, 2023.
• Pauline Pic, "Une Géographie Politique de l’Exploitation des Ressources Naturelles en Arctique Évolution Contrastée d’un Enjeu Polarisant," Annuaire Français de Relations Internationales (2023), 769-783.
• Emirhan Altunkaya, “Arctic Region in the Era of Climate Change: A Zone of Cooperation or a Zone of Conflict?” Ph.D. Dissertation, Middle East Technical University, 2023.
• Emilie Broek, Nicholas Olczak and Lisa Dellmuth, "The Involvement of Civil Society Organizations in Arctic Governance," SIPRI Insights on Peace and Security, No. 2023/02, February 2023.
• Heather N. Nicol and Lassi K. Heininen, "The Evolving Geopolitics of Polar Regions," Chapter 2 in Polar Cousins: Comparing Antarctic and Arctic Geostrategic Futures, eds. Christian Leuprecht and Douglas Causey. (Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 2023), 59-88 (62, 75, 77).
• Amy Chua, "Extract from Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations." Military Review (2023).
• Rebecca Monson, Gender, Property and Politics in the Pacific: Who Speaks for Land? (Cambridge University Press, 2023).
• Hema Nadarajah, "An Arctic in Flux: Singapore's Perspective." Asia Policy 18, no. 1 (2023): 39-48.
• Yitong Chen, "China's Arctic Policy and Engagement: Review and Prospects." Asia Policy 18, no. 1 (2023): 29-38.
• Zhang, Xiekui, Xinfeng Zuo, and Xinjian Chen. "Open doors: The impact of border reforming and opening policies on the regional border economies of China." International Studies of Economics (2023).
• Whitney Lackenbauer, Canadian Publications on Arctic Sovereignty, Security, and Circumpolar Governance, 2005-2022, Version 1.0. Peterborough: North American and Arctic Defence and Security Network (NAADSN), January 2023.
• J. L. Black, Eternal Putin?: Confronting Navalny, the Pandemic, Sanctions, and War with Ukraine (Rowman & Littlefield, 2023), n127.
• Grete K. Hovelsrud, Julia Olsen, Annika E. Nilsson, Bjørn Kaltenborn and Julien Lebel, "Managing Svalbard Tourism: Inconsistencies and Conflicts of Interest," Arctic Review on Law and Politics, Vol. 14 (2023), 86-106.
• Alexandria Jessika Fenn, The Tip of the Iceberg: Situating the U.S. Arctic Discourse as an Arctic Ally or Adversary, Master's Thesis in International Affairs, University of Iceland, June 2023.
2022:
• Lin Poyer, War at the Margins: Indigenous Experiences in World War II, University of Hawaii Press (Sustainable History Monograph Series), 2022.
• Przemysław Piotr Damski, "Arktyka w przestrzeni informacyjnej państw arktycznych w dobie wojny rosyjsko-ukraińskiej (24 lutego–8 czerwca 2022 r.)," Sprawy Międzynarodowe, Vol. 75, No. 2, 125-144, https://doi.org/10.35757/SM.2022.75.2.07.
• Sardana Nikolaeva, The Indigenous Political in the Post Soviet Sakha Republic, Doctoral Thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Manitoba, 2022.
• Daniel González Palau, Serafin Pazos-Vidal, Marola Padin Novas, and Tamara Espiñeira, Paradiplomacy in Europe: The cases of Galicia, Åland, Flanders and Greenland, Coppieters Foundation (2: 2002), 55, 57, 61, 62 and 67.
• Taggart, James M. “La Base Cultural De Una Rebelión Nahua.” Sistemas Simbólicos y Ritualidad. Hacer Con Saber Tomo I (2022): 93–112.
• Bidisha Banerji and Shashwat Sen, "Impact Of Climate Change On Geopolitics And International Relations," International Journal of Food and Nutritional Sciences (IJFANS) 11, No. 3 (December 2022), ISSN (print: 2319 1775; online: 2320 7876).
• Burcea, Iohana-Georgia. "Efectele războiului din Ucraina asupra Regiunii Arctice." INFOSFERA-Revista de studii de securitate si Informații pentru Apărare 14, no. 3 (2022): 41-48.
• Norvell, Allee. The Importance of Cultural Knowledge in Counterinsurgency. Undergraduate Honors Thesis. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2022.
• Kuhn, Annegret, and Valentina Treffenfeldt Montoya. "Indigene Souveränität und die Governance von Territorialität in der Arktis." ZIB Zeitschrift für Internationale Beziehungen 29, no. 1 (2022): 126-140.
• Zmyvalova, Ekaterina. "The Impact of the War in Ukraine on the Indigenous Small-numbered Peoples’ Rights in Russia." Arctic Review 13 (2022): 407-414.
• Palubinskaite, Diana. "The end of peaceful collaboration and ‘Arctic exceptionalism’in the light of Russian aggression in Ukraine during the 2022 invasion. To which extent should Russian aggression in the case of the Ukraine be interpreted as a threat to continued Arctic security?" Department of Culture, Communication and Globalization, Aarlborg Universitet, Master's Thesis, May 31, 2022.
• Churney, Major Brian, "Can the Canadian Armed Forces Meet the Expectations of the Government of Canada in the Arctic?" JCSP 45 Solo Flight, Canadian Forces College/Collège des Forces Canadiennes (2022).
• Mattheis, Frank, Nuno Sardinha Monteiro, Andreas Østhagen, Alexander Shaheen, Kirsty McLean, Carmen Gaudêncio, Ana Santos Pinto et al. "Seminário do 'Cento Atlântico'[III]." IDN Cadernos (2022).
• Khlopina, Anastasiia. "The current situation of Sweden in the context of possible threats and challenges: state of the defense and security policy and Arctic as a potential future conflict," Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, National University Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Faculty of Social Sciences and Social Technologies, Department of Political Science Master’s Thesis, 2022.
• Sherman, Jeff P. "Fighting in the Future Tense: Norm Collision and Imaginaries in the Emergence of Autonomous Weapons." PhD Dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz, 2022.
• Heininen, LASSI. "Climate Change and the Great Power Rivalry in the Arctic." Insight Turkey 24, no. 2 (2022): 25-38.
• Skriba, Andrei, and Arina Sapogova. "Environment, Geopolitics and Environmental Geopolitics in the Arctic: Is There a Logic of Conflict Among Institutions of Cooperation?" in Arctic Fever (Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2022), 85-112. .
• Sheng, Edmund Li. "A Panorama of the Arctic: Geopolitics and International Law," in Arctic Opportunities and Challenges (Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2022), 7-26.
• Heininen, Lassi. "The Age of Climate Change, as a Challenge for States, and IR Theories," in Arctic Fever (Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2022), 45-66.
• Coca, Pau López, and Adrián Morcillo Pazos. "Comparativa de las políticas de la UE y de China en el Ártico: Nuevos retos tras la Guerra de Ucrania." Quaderns IEE 1, no. 2 (2022): 87-114.
• Mossé, Marie. "An overview of Inuit perspectives on Franklin’s lost expedition (1845–1846): a few avenues for discussion and future research–commentary to Pawliw, Berthold, and Lasserre," Fennia-International Journal of Geography (2022).
• Salter, Mark B. "Quantum Sovereignty+ Entanglement." Quantum International Relations: A Human Science for World Politics 315 (2022): 262.
• Prášil, Matěj. Geopolitický význam GIUK, Diplomová práce, Institut politologických studií, Katedra politologie, Fakulta sociálních věd (Faculty of Social Sciences), VĚD Univerzita Karlova (2022).
• Stern, Pamela R., ed. The Inuit World. Routledge, 2022.
• Adnan, D. A. L. "Arktik Siyaseti ve Türkiye." Barış Araştırmaları ve Çatışma Çözümleri Dergisi 10, no. 1: 1-26.
• Norvell, Allee. "The Importance of Cultural Knowledge in Counterinsurgency." Undergraduate Honors Thesis. University of Nebraska-Lincoln. (2022).
• Gillespie, Josephine, and Dan Penny. "The effect of proximity to protected areas on community adaptation to environmental change." Journal of Environmental Management 301 (2022): 113805.
• Palubinskaite, Diana. "The End of Peaceful Collaboration and ‘Arctic Exceptionalism’ in the Light of Russian Aggression in Ukraine During the 2022 Invasion: To which extent should Russian aggression in the case of the Ukraine be interpreted as a threat to continued Arctic security?" Master's Thesis, Department of Culture, Communication, and Globalization, Aalborg University, May 31, 2022.
• Andréanne Brunet-Bélanger, "Inégalités et pandémie dans les communautés autochtones au Paraguay," Cahiers des Amériques Latines Vol. 99 (2022): 201-217
• Chris McDonald and Lorena Figueiredo, "A Framework for Comparative Assessment of Indigenous Land Governance." Land 2022: 11 (14 June 2022), 906, https://doi.org/10.3390/land11060906.
• Anna Sharapova, Sara L. Seck, Sarah L. MacLeod, Olga Koubrak, "Indigenous Rights and Interests in a Changing Arctic Ocean: Canadian and Russian Experiences and Challenges," Arctic Review on Law and Politics, Vol. 13 (2022), 286–311, http://dx.doi.org/10.23865/arctic.v13.3264.
2021:
• James Kraska. "Command Accountability for AI Weapon Systems in the Law of Armed Conflict." International Law Studies 97, no. 1 (2021): 22.
• Laura Eerkes-Medrano and Henry P. Huntington, "Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere." Frontiers in Climate, 3:675805 (June 2021) doi: 10.3389/fclim.2021.67580.
• Jen Rose Smith. "'Exceeding Beringia': Upending universal human events and wayward transits in Arctic spaces," Society and Space, 39, no. 1 (February 2021), 158-175.
• Astri Dankertsen, Elisabeth Pettersen, and Jill-Beth Otterlei. "'If we want to have a good future, we need to do something about it.' Youth, security and imagined horizons in the intercultural Arctic Norway," Acta Borealia: A Nordic Journal of Circumpolar Societies, 38:2 (2021), 150-169, DOI: 10.1080/08003831.2021.1982547
• Oya DAĞLAR MACAR and Bumin Kağan OĞUZ. "Tarihten Bugüne Rusya'nın Arktik Politikaları: Değişimler ve Süreklilikler." International Journal of Politics and Security 3, no. 1 (Arktik Özel Sayısı) (2021): 336-362.
• Silva, Pedro Henrique Iranço, and Naiane Inez Cossul. "O degelo no Ártico e a nova frente geopolítica para a Rússia." Conjuntura Global 10, no. 1 (2021).
• Huebert, Rob. "Chapter 4: Understanding Arctic Security: A Defence of Traditional Security Analysis," in Breaking Through: Understanding Sovereignty and Security in the Circumpolar Arctic. University of Toronto Press, 2021, 80-96.
• Graham, Lorie. "Expert Testimony of Professor Lorie M. Graham Before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Caso Pueblos Indígenas Maya Kaqchikel de Sumpango y Otros Vs. Guatemala, Case No. CDH-3-2020." (2021).
• Colombo, Roberto, and Emil Aslan Souleimanov. Counterinsurgency Warfare and Brutalisation: The Second Russian-Chechen War. Routledge, 2021.
• Kaura, Vinay. "The Changing Landscape of India-Pakistan-Afghanistan Relationship," in Pande, Aparna, ed., Routledge Handbook on South Asian Foreign Policy (2021): 111-124.
• Oppenheimer, P. "Shipping Through an Arctic Council Lens." (2021).
• Lassi Heininen. "The ‘Regime’ Nature of the Arctic: Implications for World Order." In The Arctic and World Order, pp. 309-325. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021.
• Martijn Kitzen and Christina van Kuijck, Chapter 15: All Deterrence Is Local: The Utility and Application of Localised Deterrence in Counterinsurgency in NL ARMS: Netherlands Annual Review of Military Studies 2020; Deterrence in the 21st Century—Insights from Theory and Practice, ed. Frans Osinga and Tim Sweijs (2021), 290.
• Cahley Tod-Tims, "'We are starving for our food': Country food (in) security in Inuvik, Northwest Territories," in The Inuit World, Pamela Stern, ed., Routledge, 2021, 270-287.
• Arda Özkan, Ankara University, Guest Editor, Special Issue on the Arctic/Arktik Özel Sayısı, International Journal of Politics and Security (IJPS), Vol. 3, No. 2 (2021).
• Salih Yilmaz, Arktika’da Rusya-Çin İş Birliği Ve Türkiye'nin Arktika Politikasi, İstihbarat ve Güvenlik Üzerine Çalışmalar (Studies on Intelligence and Security), eds., Tuğg. Murat Bulut, Prof. Dr. İsmail Hakkı Demircioğlu, Doç. Dr. Tekin Avaner, Doç. Dr. Gökhan İbrahim Öğünç, Dr. Mehmet Kahya, Dr. Bülent Sungur, Nobel Bilimsel, 2021, 397-414.
• Dağlar Macar and Oya ve Bumin Kağan Oğuz. “Tarihten Bugüne Rusya’nın Arktik Politikaları: Değişimler ve Süreklilikler,” International Journal of Politics and Security (IJPS), Cilt. 3, Sayı. 1, 2021, 336-362, .
2020:
• James M. Taggart, The Rain Gods’ Rebellion: The Cultural Basis of a Nahua Insurgency. University Press of Colorado, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1353/book.75859.
• Ekaterina Zmyvalova, “Human Rights of Indigenous Small-Numbered Peoples in Russia: Recent Developments.” Arctic Review on Law and Politics 11 (2020): 334–59. https://www.jstor.org/stable/48710636.
• Sebastian Knechtand and Paula Laubenstein, "Is Arctic governance research in crisis? A pathological diagnosis," Polar Record 56: E35 (December 2020), doi:10.1017/S0032247420000352.
• Sarah Kate Milne. "Security on Ice: The Historical Transformation of Regional Security and International Society in the Arctic from the Cold War to the Twenty-First Century," Doctoral Thesis, Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Limerick, August 15, 2020, https://hdl.handle.net/10344/9525.
• Andreas Østhagen. "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Three Levels of Arctic Geopolitics," Kristina Spohr and Daniel S. Hamilton, eds., The Arctic and World Order (Foreign Policy Institute and Kissinger Center for Global Affairs, School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, 2020).
• Christopher Tremoglie. "Arctic Geopolitics Reconsidered: Pathways to Conflict and Cooperation" 20 June 2020. CUREJ: College Undergraduate Research Electronic Journal, University of Pennsylvania, https://repository.upenn.edu/curej/250.
• Major Brian Churney, "Can the Canadian Armed Forces Meet the Expectations of the Government of Canada in the Arctic," Solo Flight, JCSP 45 (2018-2020), Canadian Forces College, https://www.cfc.forces.gc.ca/259/290/308/305/churney.pdf.
• Arbakhan Magomedov. "The Russian State and the Arctic Indigenous Peoples: Is Politics Coming Back?." Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization 28, no. 4 (2020): 541-564.
• Avinoam Meir, Batya Roded, and Arnon Ben-Israel. "Janus-faced mobility, sense of road-as-place and Indigenous Bedouin-Jewish settlers relationships." Settler Colonial Studies (2020): 1-21.
• Lt. Col. Kirby R. “Bo” Dennis. "Preparing for the Unexpected: Enhancing Army Readiness in the Arctic." Military Review 100, no. 4 (2020): 6.
• Huang, Daquan, Yue Lang, and Tao Liu. "Evolving population distribution in China’s border regions: Spatial differences, driving forces and policy implications." Plos One 15, no. 10 (2020): e0240592.
• Laleh Khalili. "Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency in the Neoliberal Age," Chapter 18 in The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Middle-Eastern and North African History (2020): 365.
• Heather Exner-Pirot and Rob Huebert. "Arctic Security,” Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (2020).
• Lassi Heininen. “Security Perspectives from Finland.” Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (2020).
• Rauna Kuokkanen, and Victoria Sweet. “Indigenous Security Theory.” Routledge Handbook of Arctic Security (2020).
• Mario Marinov. “The Militarisation of the Arctic and the Growing Importance of the Far North for Great Power Politics,” Strategic Changes in Security and International Relations (2020): 169.
• Andreas Østhagen. Coast Guards and Ocean Politics in the Arctic. Palgrave Pivot, Singapore (2020).
• Vuković, Nebojša. “Do we need revision of the key geopolitical paradigms?” Medjunarodni problemi (International Problems, published by the Institute of International Politics and Economics, Belgrade, Serbia)72, No. 1 (2020): 15-36.
• Camille Zuber. "Regulatory gaps in the Arctic legal framework regarding vessel-source pollution: the exclusion of harmful shipping pollutants such as black carbon and noise pollution from the Polar Code, from MARPOL, and from the IMO regime–an analysis of the present legal shortcomings in protecting the Arctic environment from vessel-source pollution." Master's Thesis, 2020.
• Adnan Dal. Cooperative Role of the Arctic Council as an Example of Regime Formation. IJOPEC PUBLICATION, 2020.
• Peter Kikkert and P. Whitney Lackenbauer. "The Militarization of the Arctic to 1990." In The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics, pp. 487-505. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2020 (5 November 2019).
• LCDR Jeffrey Anderson. "International Strait in the Arctic: Implications for the RCN," JCSP 46 Service Paper, CANADIAN FORCES COLLEGE, 2019-20 (2020).
• Camille Escudé, Coopération Politique et Intégration Régionale en Arctique (1996-2019): Construction d’une région: naissance, développement et remise en cause d’un nouvel espace politique régional. Institut d’études politiques de paris, Ecole doctorale de sciences po, Programme doctoral en science politique, mention relations internationales, Centre de recherches internationales (CERI), Doctorat en science politique - sciences po, 2020.
• Cahley Tod-Tims, "Hungry all the time": Contemporary experiences of and perspectives on traditional food access in Inuvik, NWT, Master's Thesis in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 2020.
2019:
• Holly Ann Dobbins, Nunavut, A Creation Story. The Inuit Movement in Canada's Newest Territory, Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Social Sciences, Syracuse University (2019).
• Timothy J. Demy, ed., The U.S. Naval Institute on Arctic Naval Operations, Naval Institute Press, 2019.
• Minhas, Ahmed Saeed, Bashir Ahmad, and Masrur Alam Khan. "Seizing Kashmir's Identity: Implications for the Global Peace and Stability." NDU Journal (Pakistan), 2019.
• Jane Freeman, Indigeneity and Me, Te Kaharoa, Vol. 12, 2019, ISSN 1178-6035.
• De Buitrago and Reinke. “Risk Representations and Confrontational Actions in the Arctic.” Journal of Strategic Security 12, no. 3 (2019): 13-36.
• Jeremy M. Mckenzie, Instead of Buying Greenland, Enhance Security & Cooperation, The Pacific Council Magazine, November26, 2019, https://www.pacificcouncil.org/newsroom/instead-buying-greenland-enhance-security-cooperation.
• Freedman, Lawrence, and Jeffrey Michaels. “Offence and Defence.” In The Evolution of Nuclear Strategy, pp. 35-50. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2019.
• Korkina, Varvara. “Indigenous Youth in Russia: Challenges and Opportunities.” (2019): 141-155.
• Salter, Mark B. “Arctic Security, Territory, Population: Canadian Sovereignty and the International.” International Political Sociology 13, no. 4 (2019): 358-374.
• Springer, LTC Nathan R. “United States Military Governance,” School of Advanced Military Studies, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, KS (2019).
• Zojer, Gerald. “The Interconnectedness of Digitalisation and Human Security in the European High North: Cybersecurity Conceptualised through the Human Security Lens.” The Yearbook of Polar Law Online 10, no. 1 (2019): 297-320.
• Jacobs, Bette. "Indigenous identity: Summary and future directions." Statistical Journal of the IAOS, vol. 35, no. 1 (March 2019): 147-157.
• French, Nadia. "Not All Black and White: The Environmental Dimension of Arctic Exploration." In Arctic Triumph: Northern Innovation and Persistence, Nikolas Sellheim, Yuliya V. Zaika, Ilan Kelman, eds. (Cham, Switzerland: Springer Polar Sciences Series, 2019), 129-146.
• Yuwa Wei, Issues Decisive for China’s Rise or Fall: An International Law Perspective (Singapore: Springer Nature, 2019).
Gojowsky, Torsten, and Sebastian Koegler. Building Special Operations Relationships with Fragile Partners: Best Practices from Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan. Vol. 17, BoD–Books on Demand, 2019.
• Rasul Bakhsh Rais, Geopolitics on the Pakistan–Afghanistan Borderland: An Overview of Different Historical Phases, Geopolitics 24:2, 284-307.
• Sidorova, Evgeniia (Jen). “Circumpolar Indigeneity in Canada, Russia, and the United States (Alaska): Do Differences Result in Representational Challenges for the Arctic Council?” Arctic 72, no. 1 (2019): 71–81.
• Michael J, Swangler. Fiat Currency, From Wallet to Museum: Accelerating the Inevitable in the Name of Homeland Security. Thesis, Master of Arts in Security Studies (Homeland Security and Defense), Naval Postgraduate School, June 1, 2019.
• Andreas Østhagen, Maritime Tasks and Challenges in the Arctic, Chapter 3, Coast Guards and Ocean Politics in the Arctic, Springer Nature, 2019.
• Sophia Beatrice Ord, Canada's Conduct of Lawful Relations: The Hul'qumi'num TreatyGroup's Jurisdictional Entanglements in Non-Aboriginal Law. Master of Law by Research (LLMRes) Thesis, University of Kent, 2019.
• Jana Shoemaker, From the Land of Ice and Snow: Inuit, Ice and the Northwest Passage, Advanced Masters in Public International Law Thesis, Leiden Universiteit in the Netherlands, 2019.
• Margaret Boyce, One Hundred Words for Conquest: Curating Arctic Sovereignty at the Winnipeg Art Gallery, Doctoral Thesis, School of Graduate Studies (English and Cultural Studies), Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University, 2019.
2018:
• Gray, Colin S. Theory of Strategy, Oxford University Press (2018).
• Glenn, Russell. New Directions in Strategic Thinking 2.0, ANU Strategic Defence Studies Centre's Golden Anniversary Conference Proceedings, ANU Press, 2018.
• Nuttall, Mark. "Self-determination and indigenous governance in the Arctic." In The Routledge Handbook of the Polar Regions, pp. 93-106. Routledge, 2018.
• O’Leary, Derek Kane. "Public and National Imagination of the Arctic." In Eurasia’s Maritime Rise and Global Security, pp. 197-213. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2018.
• MAJ Matthew W. Todd, U.S. Army, The Strategic Context of the Arctic and the Implications for the U.S. Army, School of Advanced Military Studies Monograph, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, May 24, 2018.
• Heininen, Lassi. "Arctic Geopolitics from Classical to Critical Approach–Importance of Immaterial Factors." Geography, Environment, Sustainability 11, no. 1 (2018): 171-186.
• Moe, Louise Wiuff. "Counter-insurgency in the Somali territories: the ‘grey zone’between peace and pacification." International Affairs 94, no. 2 (2018): 319-341.
• Colgan, Jeff D. "Climate Change and the Politics of Military Bases." Global Environmental Politics (2018): 33-51.
• Atkins, Ed. "Saltwater Geopolitics in North America," Chapter 3 in Widening the Scope of Environmental Policies in North America: Towards Blue Approaches, edited by Dr. Gustavo Sosa-Nunez, Palgrave Macmillan (2018).
• Hong, Nong. "China's Interests in the Arctic: Opportunities and Challenges," Institute for China-America Studies (ICAS), 2018, http://chinaus-icas.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/2018.03.06-China-Arctic-Report.pdf
• Barack, Calvince. "How does the terrorist group Al-Qaeda select their targets and what is their motivation?," GRIN.com, 2018, http://content.grin.com/document/v384339.pdf
• Payne, Kenneth. "Artificial Intelligence: A Revolution in Strategic Affairs?." Survival 60, no. 5 (2018): 7-32.
• Zojer, Gerald. "The Role of Hydrocarbon Development in Arctic Governance: A Suitable Approach for Human Development in the Region?." In Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic (Brill Nijhoff, 2018), 212-242.
• Maurer, John D. "Divided Counsels: Competing Approaches to SALT, 1969–1970." Diplomatic History (2018).
• Kronfeld, Melissa Jane. "A Viper’s Nest of Perils: The Construction and Prioritization of Threats in the Post-Cold War Era and the Evolution of American National Security Policy," Doctoral Thesis, Graduate Program in Global Affairs, Rutgers University, May 2018, https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/57350/PDF/1/play/.
• Harvey, Layne Ross, Would the proposed reforms affecting ahu whenua trusts have impeded hapū in the development of their lands? A Ngāti Awa perspective, Doctoral Thesis, Faculty of Business, Auckland University of Technology, June 30, 2018.
• Jordan Steingard, The Distant Early Warning Line: Geographies, Infrastructures, and Environments of Warning, Master's Thesis, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, September 2018.
• Tashi Tewa, "Himalayan Indigenous Peoples in Local Elections after 20 years: The Historical Gendered Perspective from Dolpo," in Walking and Learning with Indigenous Peoples: A Contribution to the 5th Anniversary of the International Summer Program on Indigenous Peoples’ Rights and Policy at Columbia University, eds. Pamela Calla and Elsa Stamatapolou (New York: Columbia University Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race (SCER) and Institute for the Study of Human Rights (ISHR), 2018).
2017:
• Nadine C., Fabbi, Jason C. Young, and Eric W. Finke, "Ukiuqta’qtumi Hivuniptingnun: One Arctic, One Future," Chapter 8 in One Arctic, edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer, Heather Nicol, and Wilfrid Greaves. Ottawa: Canadian Arctic Resources Committee and Waterloo: Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, 2017.
• Heather Nicol, "Chapter Twelve: Conclusions," in Heather Nicol and P. Whitney Lackenbauer, eds. The Networked North: Borders and Borderlands in the Canadian Arctic Region. Waterloo, Ontario: Borders in Globalization/Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, 2017.
• Kristen L. Shake (Corresponding Author), Karen E. Frey, Deborah G. Martin and Philip E. Steinberg, (Un)frozen Spaces: Exploring the Role of Sea Ice in the Marine Socio-legal Spaces of the Bering and Beaufort Seas, Journal of Borderlands Studies 33, No. 2 (2017), 239-253, published onlone 9 July 2017.
• John D. Maurer, "An Era of Negotiation: Salt in the Nixon Administration, 1969-1972." PhD dissertation, Georgetown University, 2017.
• David J. Katz, "Community-Based Development in Rural Afghanistan: First, Assume a Community," Peaceworks (Washington: United States Institute of Peace, April 24, 2017).
• Rasul Bakhsh Rais, "Geopolitics on the Pakistan–Afghanistan Borderland: An Overview of Different Historical Phases." Geopolitics (2017): 1-24.
• Michael Byers and Andreas Østhagen. "Why Does Canada Have So Many Unresolved Maritime Boundary Disputes?." Canadian Yearbook of International Law/Annuaire canadien de droit international (2017): 1-62.
• Ed Atkins, "Saltwater Geopolitics in North America." Widening the Scope of Environmental Policies in North America. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 23 August 2017 (online), 35-56.
• Andrew M. Wender. “Asymmetry and the Reimagining of Political Theology,” Teloscope: TELOS: Critical Theory of the Contemporary (March 8, 2017).
• Arabinda Acharya. "The Right War, the Just War? Assessing the Fight against Terrorism since 9/11," Talking to the Enemy. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2017.
• Sini Hangaslammi, "Arktis ja muuttuva suvereniteetti: Diskurssianalyysi Kanadan liittovaltiohallinnon ja inuiittijärjestöjen suvereniteettikäsityksistä" (2017).
• Lawrence Rubin, "Islamic political activism among Israel’s Negev Bedouin population," British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 44, no. 3 (2017): 429-446.
• Sabrina Pastorková, "Critical assessment of the Arctic's geostrategic importance during World War I and World War II" (2017).
• Geir Hønneland, "The Arctic Wave," in Arctic Euphoria and International High North Politics, pp. 83-100. Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2017.
• Emil Bessels and William Barr. Polaris: The Chief Scientist's Recollections of the American North Pole Expedition, 1871-73. University of Calgary Press, 2017.
• Alain Lafreniere, Can We Just Get Along Already? Canadian Arctic Sovereignty is American Security. School of Advanced Air and Space Studies, Maxwell Air Force Base, 2017.
• Donald R. Rothwell, Arctic Ocean Shipping: Navigation, Security and Sovereignty in the North American Arctic. Brill Research Perspectives in the Law of the Sea, Vol.1, No. 3 (2017), 1-88. https://doi.org/10.1163/24519359-12340103.
• Steinar Skaar, The Utility of Coercion Theory in the Afghan Conflict, Ph.D. Thesis, School of Humanities, College of Arts, University of Glasgow, 2017, https://theses.gla.ac.uk/8872/.
• Jard Olina Ykema, Participation of Non-Arctic States in the Arctic Council: Analysed through neoliberal institutionalism and constructivism. Master’s Thesis, International Public Management and Public Policy, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, 2017.
• Shenuka de Sylva and Arnaud Leurquin, Resilient Living Environments: Identifying a Design Approach to Creating Housing Suited to Culture and Context, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, The Asian Conference on the Social Sciences, 2017.
• Kamrul Hossain, Gerald Zojer, Wilfried Greaves, J. Miguel Roncero, and Micheal Sheehan, "Constructing Arctic Security: An inter-disciplinary approach to understanding security in the Barents region," Polar Record, Vol. 53, No. 01 (2017).
2016:
• Daniel Drache, Fred Fletcher and Coral Voss, What the Canadian Public is Being Told About the More than 1200 Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women and First Nations Issues: A Content and Context Analysis of Major Mainstream Canadian Media, 2014-2015, SSRN Electronic Journal, April 2, 2016.
• Adam Lajeunesse and P. Whitney Lackenbauer, "The Canadian Armed Forces in the Arctic: Building Capabilities and Connections," Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 16, No. 4 (2016).
• Gregory Bereiter, The U.S. Navy in Operation Enduring Freedom, 2001-2002, Naval History & Heritage Command (2016), https://www.history.navy.mil/content/dam/nhhc/research/library/online-reading-room/war-and-conflict/us-navy-operation-enduring-freedom/Chrono-OEF%20Final-PDFversion.pdf.
• Nadine C. Fabbi, "Chapter 6: Inuit Foreign Policy and International Relations in the Arctic," in Lassi Heininen and Heather Nicol, eds., Climate Change and Human Security from a Northern Point of View, Waterloo, ON: Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, St. Jerome’s University, Waterloo, 2016, 77-96.
• P. Whitney Lackenbauer and James Manicom, "Chapter 9: Canada’s Northern Strategy and East Asian Interests in the Arctic," in Lassi Heininen and Heather Nicol, eds., Climate Change and Human Security from a Northern Point of View, Waterloo, ON: Centre on Foreign Policy and Federalism, St. Jerome’s University, 2016, 127-164.
• Ron Robin, The Cold World They Made. Harvard University Press, 2016.
• Yee-Kuang Heng, Managing Global Risks in the Urban Age: Singapore and the Making of a Global City. Routledge, 2016.
• Michael Broderick. Reconstructing Strangelove: Inside Stanley Kubrick's 'Nightmare Comedy'. Columbia University Press, 2016.
• Cathy Sherry, Strata Title Property Rights: Private governance of multi-owned properties. Routledge, 2016.
• Jérémie Gilbert. Indigenous Peoples' Land Rights under International Law. Brill, 2016.
• M. Troy Burnett, ed. Natural Resource Conflicts [2 volumes]: From Blood Diamonds to Rainforest Destruction. Abc-Clio, 2016.
• Frank R. Spellman, Food Supply Protection and Homeland Security. Bernan Press, 2016.
• Alexey Fenenko, "International Norms in the New Common Spaces: A New Challenge in the Twenty-First Century." In Challenge and Change, pp. 225-245. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016.
• Leo Evandro Figueiredo dos Santos, "Cooperação e conflitos nas regiões polares: um cenário para o século XXI." (2016).
• Judith Tinnes. "Bibliography on Legal Aspects of Terrorism." Perspectives on Terrorism 10, no. 4 (2016).
• Melanie Hawes. "An Era of Convergence: Joint Defense between the United States and Canada 1949-1963." (2016).
• Graham Huggan. "Introduction: Unscrambling the Arctic." In Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North, pp. 1-29. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016.
• Emily Tsui. "Home in the North: The Northern Forum, Alaska, and Circumpolar Subnational Governance." (2016).
• Kirk Dombrowski, Patrick Habecker, G. Robin Gauthier, Bilal Khan, Joshua Moses, Dmitry V. Arzyutov, Diane Austin-Broos, et al. "Relocation Redux: Labrador Inuit Population Movements and Inequalities in the Land Claims Era." Current Anthropology 57, no. 6 (2016).
• Erika Simpson. "Nuclear Weapons and NATO: Is it safer to deter or to disarm?" (2016). CPSA/ISA-Canada Section on International Relations, Session: C1(b) – Governing Weapons, May 31, 2016, 8:45-10:15 am.
• Robert J. Bunker. Blood Sacrifices: Violent Non-State Actors and Dark Magico-Religious Activities. iUniverse, 2016.
• Robert W. Orttung and Andreas Wenger. "Explaining Cooperation and Conflict in Marine Boundary Disputes Involving Energy Deposits." Region: Regional Studies of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia 5, no. 1 (2016): 75-96.
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Europe's ‘Others’ in the Polar Mediterranean." Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 107, no. 2 (2016): 177-188.
• Dag Avango. "Heritage in action: historical remains in polar conflicts." Science, Geopolitics and Culture in the Polar Region: Norden Beyond Borders (2016): 329.
• Daniel J. Brown. "Institutional Memory and the US Air Force." Air & Space Power Journal 30, no. 2 (2016): 38.
• Kathleen A. Tobin, "People, not property: population issues and the neutron bomb." Cold War History (2016): 1-19.
• Josef Amann, "It’s getting hot in here: Die Arktis im Wandel," Working Papers des Forums Regensburger Politikwissenschaftler – FRP Working Paper 02/2016, Regensburg: April 2016.
• Graham Huggan, "Introduction: Unscrambling the Arctic." In Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North (London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016), 1-29.
• Lawrence Rubin, "Islamic political activism among Israel’s Negev Bedouin population." British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (2016): 1-18.
• Dong Kyu Lee, "An Introductory Study on a Disaster Management System Using Big Data-With Focus on the Comparison of the United States, Britain, and South Korea." 한국위기관리논집 12 (2016): 17-32.
• Andreas Østhagen, "High North, Low Politics—Maritime Cooperation with Russia in the Arctic." Arctic Review 7.1 (2016).
• Erico Duarte and Lucas Sudbrack, "A política internacional do Ártico no século XXI: degelo e a nova fronteira Russa," ("Arctic international politics in XXI century: defrost and the new Russian frontier"), Rev. Carta Inter., Belo Horizonte, V. 11, N. 1 (2016), 221-244.
• Odysseas Gilis (Οδυσσέας Γκιλής), Επιμέλεια συλλογής, επεξεργασίας και ταξινόμησης υλικού. Μελλον-Μελοντολογα-Future: Πρόβλεψη, forecast, Forecasting, Future, Futurology. Θεσσαλονίκη 2016.
• Odd Jarl Borch, Natalia Andreassen, Nataly Marchenko, Valur Ingimundarson, Halla Gunnarsdóttir, Iurii Iudin, Sergey Petrov, Uffe Jacobsen and Birita í Dali, Maritime Activity in the High North: Current and Estimated Level Up to 2025, Maritime International Partnership in the High North (MARPART), MARPART Project Report 1, MARPART Research Consortium, 2016.
• Irena Leisbet Ceridwen Connon and Archie W. Simpson , "Critical Geography: An Introduction," in Stephen McGlinchey, Rosie Walters and Christian Scheinpflug (eds.), International Relations Theory (Bristol, England: e-International Relations, 2016), 110-116.
• Janosch Prinz and Conrad Schetter, "Conditioned Sovereignty: The Creation and Legitimation of Spaces of Violence in ‘War on Terror’," Alternatives 41, No. 3 (2016), 119-136, https://doi.org/10.1177/0304375417700171.
• Kristine Nicole Thoreson, Reframing an Arctic Image, Out of the Sublime, Doctoral thesis, Graduate Program of Art, University of Calgary, January 2016, http://hdl.handle.net/11023/2779, doi:10.11575/PRISM/27572.
2015:
• Kevin Rosner et al., Section 3: Interplay of Security and Sustainable Development: Three Examples, in Integrating Sustainable Development and Security: An Analytical Approach with Examples from the Middle East and North Africa, the Arctic and Central Asia, Stockholm Environment Institute Report 2014-15 (2015), https://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep02788.
Nadine C. Fabbi, Inuit Nunaat as an Emerging Region in Area Studies: Building an Arctic Studies Program South of the Tree Line, Doctoral Thesis, Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, Educational Leadership and Policy, University of British Columbia, April 2015.
• Terrence M. O'Sullivan, "Environmental Security is Homeland Security: Climate Disruption as the Ultimate Disaster Risk Multiplier," Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy Vol. 6, No. 2 (2015): 183-222.
• Emily Marie Ernst, "Utilizing Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) in a comprehensive counterinsurgency strategy against the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan." PhD dissertation, 2015.
• Mushtaq Ahmad Omar, "National unity government: an exceptional outcome to the crisis of the 2014 presidential elections in Afghanistan." PhD dissertation, San Francisco State University, 2015.
• Adam Stępień, "Internal Contradictions and External Anxieties: One ‘Coherent’Arctic Policy for the European Union?" The Yearbook of Polar Law Online Vol. 7, No. 1 (2015): 249-289.
• Jamie Gaskarth, "Strategy in a Complex World." The RUSI Journal 160.6 (2015): 4-11.
• Adam Stepien, Timo Koivurova, and Paula Kankaanpaa, The Changing Arctic and the European Union. Martinus Nijhoff, Nihoff Law Specials No. 89 (October 15, 2015).
• Terry Fenge and Jim Aldridge, eds., Keeping Promises: The Royal Proclamation of 1763, Aboriginal Rights, and Treaties in Canada. McGill-Queen's Native and Northern Series, Book 78 (Mcgill-Queens University Press, 2015).
• Patricia Owens, Economy of Force: Counterinsurgency and the Historical Rise of the Social. Cambridge Studies in International Relations. (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2016: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2015).
• Frank Sejersen, Rethinking Greenland and the Arctic in the Era of Climate Change: New Northern Horizons (The Earthscan Science in Society Series, 2015).
• Philip E. Steinberg, Jeremy Tasch, Hannes Gerhardt, Contesting the Arctic: Rethinking Politics in the Circumpolar North (I.B.Tauris, 2015).
• Martin Björk, Geopolitisk dynamik: Ett teoriutvecklande anspråk (Geopolitical dynamics: A theoretical claim), Swedish National Defence College, Department of Security and Strategic Studies (ISS). (Swedish). Independent thesis, advanced level, http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:824042/FULLTEXT01.pdf (June 4, 2015).
• Jillian Terry, "Feminist Ethics and War: Conceptualising Care in Post-9/11 Counterinsurgency," Department of International Relations, London School of Economics. Paper presented at the 4th European Conference on Politics and Gender (ECPG), University of Uppsala, Sweden (11-13 June, 2015) citing Johnson and Zellen, eds, Culture, Conflict and Counter-insurgency.
• Marc James Leger. "From Climate Crisis to Climate Movement: A Conversation with Robert Van Waarden." Afterimage 42, no. 4 (2015): 4.
• Terrence M. O'Sullivan, "Environmental Security is Homeland Security: Climate Disruption as the Ultimate Disaster Risk Multiplier." Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy 6, no. 2 (2015): 183-222.
• Andrew J. Goodpaster, "Brief Notices." Survival 57.2 (2015): e1-11.
• Ethem Ilbiz and Benjamin L. Curtis. "Trendsetters, Trend Followers, and Individual Players: Obtaining Global Counterterror Actor Types from Proscribed Terror Lists." Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 38, no. 1 (2015): 39-61.
• Katarzyna Zysk and David Titley. "Signals, Noise, and Swans in Today's Arctic." SAIS Review of International Affairs 35, no. 1 (2015): 169-181.
• Justiina Dahl. "Assessments, models and international politics of the Arctic: why the “New North” narrative includes only bomber, polar bear, oil, and gas deposit models, and no original parts or an assembly manual." The Polar Journal 5, no. 1 (2015): 35-58.
• Marlene Laruelle, Russia's Arctic Strategies and the Future of the Far North, Routledge, 2015.
2014:
• Colin S. Gray, Strategy & Defence Planning: Meeting the challenge of uncertainty (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).
• Bruce D. Jones and David Steven, The Risk Pivot: Great Powers, International Security, and the Energy Revolution(Brookings Institution Press, 2014).
• Nicol, Heather. "Nunavut, Sovereignty, and the Future for Arctic Peoples’ Involvement in Regional Self-Determination." Northern Review 37 (2014).
• Calvince Omondi Barack, "The Terrorist Group’s Selection of Targets and Their Motivation: The case of Al Qaeda," Master's thesis, December 13, 2014.
• Nordic Council of Ministers, Marine invasive species in the Arctic, Nordic Council of Ministers, 2014.
• Øyvind Østerud and Geir Hønneland, "Geopolitics and International Governance in the Arctic," Arctic Review on Law and Politics, Volume 5, No. 2 (2014), 156–176.
• Natalia Nefidova, Environmental Public Debate: In the context of the Arctic in Russian and Norwegian Media. Master's Thesis in Culture, Environment and Sustainability, Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, September 2014.
• Mia M. Bennett, "North by Northeast: toward an Asian-Arctic region," Eurasian Geography and Economics, Vol 55, No. 1 (August 2014), 71-93.
• Emma Barry-Pheby, "Examining the Priorities of the Canadian Chairmanship of the Arctic Council: Current Obstacles in International Law, Policy, and Governance," Colorado Natural Resources, Energy & Environmental Law Review, 25 (Summer 2014): 259-419.
• Andrea Beck, "China’s strategy in the Arctic: a case of lawfare?" The Polar Journal 4.2 (2014): 306-318.
• Elizabeth Riddell-Dixon, "The seven-decade quest to maximize Canada’s continental shelf," International Journal, July 18, 2014.
• Pauline Wakeham, "At the Intersection of Apology and Sovereignty: The Arctic Exile Monument Project," Cultural Critique, No. 87 (Spring 2014), 84-143.
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Mediterranean Metaphors: Travel, Translation and Oceanic Imaginaries in the 'New Mediterraneans' of the Arctic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean" in Anderson, Jon & Peters, Kimberley, Water Worlds: Human Geographies of the Ocean (Ashgate, 2014), 23-37.
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Maintaining Hegemony at a Distance: The U.S. Arctic Region Policy Presidential Directive of 2009" in Powell, Richard & Dodds, Klaus, Polar Geopolitics? Knowledge, Resources and Legal Regimes (Edward Elgar, 2014), 113-130.
• Waliul Hasanat, "Searching for Synergies in International Governance Systems Developed in the Circumpolar North," McGill International Journal of Sustainable Development Law & Policy, Special Issue on Polar Law Vol. 9, Issue 2 (2014), 5-41.
• Hong, Nong. "Emerging interests of non-Arctic countries in the Arctic: a Chinese perspective." The Polar Journal 4.2 (2014): 271-286.
• Glenn Hastedt, Donna L. Lybecker, Vaughn P. Shannon, Cases in International Relations: Pathways to Conflict and Cooperation, CQ Press (March 1, 2014)
• Philip E. Steinberg, "Steering Between Scylla and Charybdis: The Northwest Passage as Territorial Sea," Ocean Development & International Law, Volume 45, Issue 1, 2014 (January 2014), 84-106.
• Richard C. Powell and Klaus Dodds, eds., Polar Geopolitics? Knowledges, Resources and Legal Regimes (Edward Elgar Publishing, Jan 2014).
cJack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2015: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2014).
• Judith Tinnes, "Bibliography: Terrorism and the Media (including the Internet), Part 2," Perspectives on Terrorism, Vol 8, No. 6 (December 2014).
• Linda Fernandez, Brooks A. Kaiser and Niels Vestergaard, eds., Marine Invasive Species in the Arctic, TemaNord Environment, 2014.
2013:
• Lawrence Freedman, Strategy: A History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).
• Hew Strachan, The Direction of War: Contemporary Strategy in Historical Perspective. Cambridge University Press, 2013.
• Irina Zhilina, Security Outlook of the Arctic States and Perspectives on NATO’s Involvement, University of Akureyri, Master’s Programme in Polar Law, Faculty of Law and Social Sciences, Department of Law, University of Akureyri, September 2013.
• Arabinda Acharya, Ten Years After 9/11 - Rethinking the Jihadist Threat. Routledge, 2013.
• Margrét Cela, "Iceland: A Small Arctic State Facing Big Arctic Changes," The Yearbook of Polar Law Online, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Volume 5, Issue 1 (2013), 75–92.
• James Manicom, "Identity Politics and the Russia-Canada Continental Shelf Dispute: An Impediment to Cooperation?," Geopolitics, Volume 18, Issue 1, 2013.
• Kristian Åtland, "The Security Implications of Climate Change in the Arctic Ocean," Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean, NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security 2013, 205-216.
• Klaus Dodds, "The Ilulissat Declaration (2008): The Arctic States, 'Law of the Sea,' and Arctic Ocean," SAIS Review of International Affairs, Volume 33, Number 2, Summer-Fall 2013, 45-55.
• Heather R. Schimmelpfennig, "After the Disaster: Business Continuity," ANSI (publicaa.ansi.org), July 2013.
• Institute of the North, "New Book Released - The Fast-Changing Arctic: Rethinking Arctic Security for a Warmer World," July 12, 2013, http://www.institutenorth.org/news/entry/new-book-released.
• Sean A. Stein, "The Submarine -- The Key to Winning an Arctic Conflict," Research paper, Naval War College, May 15, 2013.
• Morrow, John Francis, Mercedes Destine Brown, and Peishan Wang. Adaptation of Russian Energy Companies to a Changing Arctic. Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), 2013.
• John Morrow, Peishan Wang, and Mercedes Brown, Adaptation of Russian Energy Companies to a Changing Arctic. In partnership with Alexey Dokuchaev, Ekaterina Tertyshnaya, and Kseniya. Laktionova Project Advisor: Svetlana Nikitina. Project Sponsor: Ernst & Young (CIS) B.V., Moscow Branch, Kirill Kharlashkin, 2013.
• Daniel W. Gray, "Changing Arctic: A Strategic Analysis of United States Arctic Policy and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea," Master's thesis, National Defense University, May 2013.
• Tereza Horejsova and Cody Morris Paris. "Tourism and the challenge of Arctic governance." International Journal of Tourism Policy 5, no. 1 (May 2013): 113-127.
• Amy Lauren Lovecraft, "The human geography of Arctic sea ice: Introduction." Polar Geography 36, No. 1-2 (Apr 2013): 1-4.
• Frédéric Lasserre, Jérôme Le Roy, and Richard Garon. "Is there an arms race in the Arctic?" Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 14, no. 3 & 4 (March 2013).
• Lisa M. Hodgetts, "The rediscovery of HMS Investigator: Archaeology, sovereignty and the colonial legacy in Canada’s Arctic." Journal of Social Archaeology 13, no. 1 (February 2013): 80-100.
• James Manicom, "The domestic politics of disputed Arctic boundaries: the Canadian case." Polar Record (Feb 2013), 1-11.
• Olivia, Mancuso, "Arctic meltdown: A problematic property rights structure translates into poor resource management." Studies by Undergraduate Researchers at Guelph 6, no. 2 (Winter 2013): 5-13.
• Jakob Steiner, Hijacked Drones, The Tuqay: Essays from Beyond the Well-Protected Domains, January 28, 2013.
• Kristian Åtland, The Security Implications of Climate Change in the Arctic Ocean, Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean (Springer: NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security), 2013, 205-216.
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2014: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2013).
• Barret Weber, The Politics of Development in Nunavut: Land Claims, Arctic Urbanization, and Geopolitics, Doctoral Thesis, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Spring 2013.
• Holmes, Angela, "Mainstream perspectives in "Indian Prince" by Trevino Brings Plenty" (2013). Representing Aboriginality 6, https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aboriginality/6.
• Corinna Röver, Security Concerns in the Arctic: Sweden's and Norway's National Strategies in the High North, Master's Thesis in Global Studies, University of Vienna, 2013.
• Vincenzo Ruggiero and Nigel South, Green Criminology and Crimes of the Economy: Theory, Research and Praxis, Journal of Critical Criminology 21 (2013): 359–373, published online May 16, 2013.
• Irina Zhilina, Security Outlook of the Arctic States and Perspectives on NATO’s Involvement, Master’s Programme in Polar Law, Faculty of Law and Social Sciences, University of Akureyri, September 2013.
• Heather R. Schimmelpfennig, After the Disaster: Business Continuity, ANSI Student Paper Competition (Second Place Winner), Columbia Southern University, 2013.
2012:
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2013: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2012).
• Fiammetta Borgia and Paolo Vargiu, The Inuit Declaration on Sovereignty in the Arctic: Between the Right to Self-Determination and a New Concept of Sovereignty?, The Yearbook of Polar Law Online, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2012, Volume 4, Issue 1, 189-204.
• Sao Noan Oo, The Shan’s fight for their Rights and Lost Homeland, Burma Digest / Shan Herald, Dec 24, 2012.
• Ana-Maria GHIMIȘ, The Arctic Region: From a frozen desert towards a hot geopolitical region, Center for European Policy Evaluation, December 10, 2012.
• Nadine C. Fabbi, "Inuit Political Engagement in the Arctic." Arctic Yearbook 2012 (November 2012): 161.
• Nikolai Vakhtin, "European University at St. Petersburg: New Program on Arctic/Siberian Studies." Sibirica 11, no. 3 (Winter 2012): 56-70.
• James Manicom, "Identity Politics and the Russia-Canada Continental Shelf Dispute: An Impediment to Cooperation?" Geopolitics, Fall 2012.
• Jeppe Strandsbjerg, "Cartopolitics, Geopolitics and Boundaries in the Arctic." Geopolitics 17, no. 4 (October 2012): 818-842.
• Peter Johnston, "Arctic Energy Resources: Security and Environmental Implications." Journal of Strategic Security 5, no. 3 (September 2012): 5.
• Alain Faure, ed. "What holds the Arctic together?" L'Harmattan, September 2012.
• Andrew Chater, A New Tipping Point: The Government of Canada, Northern Residents and Climate Change, A Paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Edmonton, Alberta, June 15, 2012, http://www.cpsa-acsp.ca/papers-2012/Chater.pdf.
• Chiara Rogate and Marco Ferrara, "Climate Change and Power Shifts in the Arctic Region," Bologna Center Journal of International Affairs 15 (Spring 2012), Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies Bologna Center, Johns Hopkins University.
• Siri E. Linz, Procedural Implications of the March 2011 Solicitor's Memorandum: Repatriation in Alaska, Master's Thesis, University of Washington, Spring 2012.
• Daniel Pomerants, "The Beaufort Sea Maritime Boundary Dispute: High Stakes for Canadian Arctic Sovereignty and Resource Extraction in a Changing Climate." PhD diss., York University, Spring 2012.
• Charles Officer and Jake Page. Fabulous Kingdom: The Exploration of the Arctic (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).
• Anders Frandsen, "Arktis: Fredelig udvikling eller militær konflikt?" Copenhagen Business School, June 1, 2012.
• Steve Dobransky, "Military Security, Energy Resources, and the Emergence of the Northwest Passage: Canada’s Arctic Dilemma," American Diplomacy, June 2012, http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/item/2012/0106/ca/dobransky_arctic.html.
• Micah I. Nodine, Lt. Col., USAF. "COIN: Is Current Doctrine Counterfeit?" School of Advanced Military Studies, U.S. Army Command and Staff General College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, AY 2012-001 (May 10, 2012).
• Rob Huebert, Heather Exner-Pirot, Adam Lajeunesse, and Jay Gulledge, Climate Change & International Security: The Arctic as a Bellwether, Arlington, VA: Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES), May 2012.
• Aleksei Fenenko, "Russia and the Competition for the Redivision of Polar Spaces," Russian Politics and Law 50, No. 2 (March-April 2012), 7-33.
• Gavin Kentch, "Comment: A Corporate Culture? The Environmental Justice Challenges of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act," Mississippi Law Journal 81 (March 2012), 813.
• Byron Ruby, "Conflict or Cooperation? Arctic Geopolitics and Climate Change," Berkeley Undergraduate Journal 25, No. 1 (January 2012).
• Nong Hong, "The Energy Factor in the Arctic Dispute: A Pathway to Conflict or Cooperation?" The Journal of World Energy Law & Business, January 2012.
• Personenlexikon Internationale Beziehungen Virtuell (PIBv), January 2012: "Bernard Brodie, Sekundärliteratur."
• Charles M. Perry and Bobby Andersen, New Strategic Dynamics in the Arctic Region: Implications for National Security and International Collaboration, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2012.
• Bernhard Gissibl, Sabine Hohler, Patrick Kupper, eds., Civilizing Nature: National Parks in Global Historical Perspective,
Volume 1 of Environment in History: International Perspectives, Berghahn Books, 2012.
• Christoph, Humrich and Klaus Dieter Wolf. From Meltdown to Showdown? Challenges and options for governance in the Arctic. (PRIF Reports, 113). Frankfurt am Main: Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung, https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-320709.
2011:
• Fujio Ohnishi, The Struggle for Arctic Regional Order: Developments and Prospects of Arctic Politics, Eurasia Border Review 5, No. 2 (2011).
• Christoph Humrich and KLaus Dieter Wolf. Vom Meltdown zum Showdown? Herausforderungen und Optionen für Governancein der Arktis. HSFK Report No. 4/2011 (Frankfurt am Main: Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung (HSFK), 2011).
• Jeppe Strandbjerg, "Introduktion," Politik (2011)
• Hannes Gerhardt, "The Inuit and Sovereignty: The Case of the Inuit Circumpolar Council and Greenland," Politik (2011).
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2012: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2011).
• Irina Valko, "Cold Waters, Hot Stakes: Systemic Geostrategic Analysis of International Relations in the Arctic Transborder Region," Master's Thesis, Institute of Political Science, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague, 2011.
• James Manicom, "Maritime Boundary Disputes in East Asia: Lessons for the Arctic," International Studies Perspectives 12, No. 3 (August 2011), 327–340.
• Kristian Åtland, "Russia's Armed Forces and the Arctic: All Quiet on the Northern Front?" Contemporary Security Policy 32, No. 2 (August 2011), 267-285.
• Ted L. McDormana, "From the Desk of the Editor-in-Chief," Ocean Development & International Law 42, No. 3 (August 2011), 280-287.
• Alexei Fenenko, "ROSSIIa I SOPERNIChESTVO ZA PEREDEL PRIPOLIaRNYKh PROSTRANSTV (РОССИЯ И СОПЕРНИЧЕСТВО ЗА ПЕРЕДЕЛ ПРИПОЛЯРНЫХ ПРОСТРАНСТВ)," Mirovaia e'konomika i mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia, No. 4 (April 2011), 16-29.
• "The Jomini of Non-Violence," Rethinking Security, February 22, 2011.
• "Sharp as a Modern Jomini," Small Wars Journal, February 17, 2011.
• Arctic Governance Task Force 2011, Melting Boundaries: Rethinking Arctic Governance. Faculty Advisors: Professor Vincent Gallucci, Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and Nadine Fabbi, Associate Director of Canadian Studies. Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington, Winter 2011.
2010:
• Jack Burkhart, Entrepreneur Planner 2011: With 365 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs (CordaNobelo, 2010).
• Ross Coen, “If One Should Come Your Way, Shoot It Down”: The Alaska Territorial Guard and the Japanese Balloon Bomb Attack of World War II, Alaska History, Volume 25, No. 2, Fall 2010, 1-19.
• Conrad Schetter, "Ungoverned territories" – Eine konzeptuelle Innovation im "War on Terror," Geographica Helvetica Jg. 65 2010/Heft 3, 181-188.
• Rasmus Gjedssø Bertelsen, Structural, Environmental, and Political Conditions for Security Policy in the High North Atlantic: The Faroe Islands, Greenland, and Iceland, Strategic Insights, Volume 9, No. 12 (December 2010), 26-52.
• Heather N. Nicol, Canadian Arctic Security and Climate Change: Where Does Traditional Security Fit? Arctic 2010: Conference International Sur L'Arctique, Enjeux et équations géopolitiques au 21ème siècle, Lyon, 22-23 November 2010, http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/53/76/45/HTML/index.html.
• Paul Arthur Berkman, Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean: Promoting Co-operation and Preventing Conflict, Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) Whitehall Paper, 30 September 2010, http://www.rusi.org/publications/whitehall/• Henrik Jørgensen, Babysteps-Developing Multilateral Institutions in the Arctic, Center for Military Studies, University of Copenhagen, APSA 2010 Annual Meeting Paper, September 2010.
• Rasmus Gjedssø Bertelsen, United Nations University Institute of Advanced Studies, Climate Change, Independence and Microstate Security Policy: The Faroe Islands, Greenland and Iceland, APSA 2010 Annual Meeting Paper, September 2010
• Stephen M. Sachs, "Upcoming Events," Indigenous Policy Journal, July 2010, http://02b7adb.netsolhost.com/ipjblog/post/Upcoming-Events.aspx.
• Kristian Åtland, Security Implications of Climate Change in the Arctic, The Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (FFI) Report No 01097, 18 May 2010, http://rapporter.ffi.no/rapporter/2010/01097.pdf.
• Paul Cornish, Arms control tomorrow: the challenge of nuclear weapons in the twenty-first century, Chapter 12, in Robin Niblett, ed., America and a Changed World: A Question of Leadership (Wiley-Blackwell, May 2010).
• Christian Webersik, Climate Change and Security: A Gathering Storm of Global Challenges (Praeger, May 2010).
• Daryl Robbin, Arctic Defense Concerns: The Need to Reorganize United States Defense Structure to Meet Threats in a Changing Arctic Region, Joint Military Operations Department, Naval War College, Report No. A771525, 3 May 2010
• Mira Burria, World Trade Institute, University of Bern, "Digital Technologies and Traditional Cultural Expressions: A Positive Look at a Difficult Relationship," International Journal of Cultural Property 17, No. 1 (April 2010): 33-63.
• Harry Borlase, "Consistencies and Inconsistencies in the National Strategies of the Arctic Littoral States," University of Akureyri, Department of Law, Faculty of Law and Social Sciences, Master’s Program in Polar Law, March 2010.
• Shelagh D. Grant, Polar Imperative: A History of Arctic Sovereignty in North America (Douglas & McIntyre, 2010).
• Valerie Alia, The New Media Nation: Indigenous peoples and global communication (Berghahn Books, 2010).
• Martin Edwin Andersen, Peoples of the Earth: Ethnonationalism, Democracy & the Indigenous Challenge in "Latin" America, Lexington Books, 2010.
• Roger G. Barry, Distinguished Professor of Geography Scientist, National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, Review of Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom. The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic, Journal Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 42, No. 1 (February 2010).
• Stig Nøra, "Kina vil ha sin del av Nordområdene: Kina blir stadig mer aktive i nordområdene. Raskere transportruter til europeiske og amerikanske markeder, store olje- og gass-ressurser og kunnskapsbehov om klima-endringene gjør Arktis attraktiv for en fremvoksende stormakt som Kina," Dagens Perspektic, January 10, 2010.
• Peter F. Johnson, Arctic Energy Resources and Global Energy Security, Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 12, No. 2.
• Deheza, Elizabeth, The Dawn of a New Arctic Chessboard. Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy Thesis, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 24 May.
• Evan Ellis, New Frontiers in China-Latin America Space Cooperation, Security and Defense Studies Review, Vol. 10 (Spring-Summer 2010): 1533-2535.
2009:
• Arabinda Acharya, Targeting Terrorist Financing: International Cooperation and New Regimes (Contemporary Terrorism Studies), Routledge, 2009.
• Amy Fletcher, A look back at 2009 releases, Juneau Empire, December 10, 2009.
• James Manicom, “Climate Change, Extended Continental Shelf Claims and Maritime Territorial Disputes in the High Arctic,” ISSS-ISAC Conference 2009, Insecurity and Durable Disorder: Challenges to the State in an Age of Anxiety, October 19, 2009.
• Melissa Bert, Captain, USCG, John Chaddic, FBI, and Brian D. Perry, Colonel, USA, The Arctic in Transition: A Call to Action, Journal of Maritime Law & Commerce, October, 2009.
• J. S. Onésimo Sandoval and Gloria Ortiz, Toward a U.S. Analytic Latino Concept, Journal of Latino-Latin America Studies 3, No. 3 (2009).
• John Donihee, Land Claim Agreements and the North to 2030, Session No. 3 Conference Pager, 2030 North National Planning Conference, Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, June 1, 2009.
• Task Force on Arctic Sovereignty, Arctic Sovereignty and Governance, Winter 2008/2009, Canadian Studies Center, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington, Seattle.
• Martin E. Andersen, Indigenous Peoples, Democracy and a Revolution of the Fourth World, Organization of American States Democracy Project, 2009.
• Betsy B. Baker, Filling an Arctic Gap: Legal and Regulatory Possibilities for Canadian-U.S. Cooperation in the Beaufort Sea Vermont Law Review 34 (2009).
• Stephen McGlinchey, Rosie Walters, and Christian Scheinpflug, International Relations Theory, E-International Relations Publishing, 2009.
2008:
• Matthew Padilla, "Preparing for the Unknown: The Threat of Agroterrorism," Sustainable Development Law & Policy IX: 1 (Fall 2008), 55-56.
• Frank R. Spellman, Food Supply Protection and Homeland Security, Government Institutes: An Imprint of The Scarecrow Press (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2008).
• Kevin Howe, Panel Looks at Ramifications of Arctic Meltdown, Monterey Herald, December 10, 2008.
• L. Anne Enke, Accusations of Obama 'Climate Shame' & 'New Holocaust' End, Anne of Carversville, December 18, 2009
John R. Wunder and Kurt E. Kinbacher, Reconfigurations of Native North America: An Anthology of New Perspectives, Texas Tech University, December 2008.
• Mira Burri-nenova and Christoph Beat Graber, eds., Intellectual Property and Traditional Cultural Expressions in a Digital Environment, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2008.
• Christoph Beat Graber, Mira Burri-Nenova, eds., Intellectual Property and Traditional Cultural Expressions in a Digital Environment, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2008.
• Mira Burri-Nenova, The Long Tail of the Rainbow Serpent: New Technologies and the Protection and Promotion of Traditional Cultural Expressions, World Trade Institute, University of Bern Law School, November 25, 2008.
• Christopher A. Shaw, Five Ring Circus: Myths and Realities of the Olympic Games, New Society Publishers, 2008.
2007:
• Camilo Rodriguez, University of Oklahoma and Jeanine El Gazi, Ministry of Culture, Colombia, The Poetics of Indigenous Radio in Colombia, Media, Culture & Society 29, No 3 (2007)
• Mark A. Smith and Keir Giles, Russia and the Arctic: the 'Last Dash North', Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, Conflict Studies Research Centre, September 2007, https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/94472/07_Sept_Russ_Arctic.pdf.
• Aeneas R. Gooding, Agricultural Terrorism (Agroterror) and Escalation Theory, Master's Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, December 2007.
• Janet Mancini Billson and Kyra Mancini, Inuit Women: Their Powerful Spirit in a Century of Change. Rowman & Littlefield, 2007.
• Karen Guttieri, Jessica Piombo, Interim governments: Institutional Bridges to Peace and Democracy? U.S. Institute of Peace, 2007.
• Ritva Levo-Henriksson, Media and Ethnic Identity: Hopi Views on Media, Identity, and Communication (Indigenous Peoples and Politics), Routledge, 2007.
• LTC Irvin Lim Fang Jau, Comprehensive maritime domain awareness: an idea whose time has come, Working Papers 41, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Singapore October 16, 2007.
• The National Security Implications of Climate Change, Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight of the Committee on Science and Technology, House of Representatives, One Hundred Tenth Congress, First Session, September 27, 2007.
• Mark A. Smith and Keith Giles, "Russia and the Arctic: 'The Last Dash North," Shrivenham, UK: Defence Academy of the UK, Advanced Research and Assessment Group, Russan Series 7, no. 26 (September 2007).
• LTC Irvin Lim Fang Jau, Comprehensive maritime domain awareness: an idea whose time has come, Pointer: Journal of the Singapore Armed Forces 33, No. 3 (2007).
2000-2006:
• Aeneas R. Gooding, Agricultural Terrorism (Agroterror) and Escalation, Master’s Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, 2007.
• Philip Joseph, American Literary Regionalism in a Global Age, Louisiana State University Press, 2006.
LTC Trent A. Pickering, USAF, A Nuclear Dilemma: Korean War Déjà vu, Master's Thesis, US Army War College, March 2006.
• Ryan Petersen, Be Our Guest, but Please Don't Stay: A Comparison of US and German Immigration, Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law 14, No. 1 (2006-07).
• Alvin Benn, Producers Urged to Remain Vigilant: Government and Industry Focus on Agriterrorism, Alabama Farmers Co-op Cooperative Farming News, September 2005.
• David O. Meteyer, The Art of Peace: Dissuading China from Developing Counter Space Weapons, Master’s Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, June 2005.
• Christian Enemark, Disease Security in Northeast Asia: Biological Weapons and Natural Plagues, Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, 2004.
• Wade L. Huntley, Unthinking the Unthinkable: US Nuclear Policy and Asymmetric Threats, Strategic Insights, Vol. 3, No. 2 (February 2004), https://hdl.handle.net/10945/11213.
• Frederick J. Moll, The Legal & Technological Advantages of a North American Perimeter In the War Against Terrorism, Syracuse Science and Technology Law Reporter 2 (Spring 2004).
• Neil Blair Christensen, Inuit in Cyberspace: Embedding Offline Identities Online, Museum Tusculanum Press, 2003.
• Dean C. Alexander, Business Confronts Terrorism: Risks and Responses, University of Wisconsin Press, 2003.
• Dave McComb, Semantics in Business Systems: The Savvy Manager's Guide, Morgan Kaufmann, 2003.
• Frits Pannekoek, "Chapter 6: Cyber Imperialisme et marginalisation des autochtones au Canada," in Jean-Paul Baillargeon, ed., Transmission de la culture, petites sociétés, mondialisation (Les Presses de l'Université Laval, 2002), 85-103.
• Michael J. Mazarr, Information Technology and World Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.
• Maximilian C. Forte, Adelaide University (Australia), We are not Extinct: Caribbean Indigeneity and the Internet, Sincronía, Spring 2002, sincronia.cucsh.udg.mx/CyberIndigen.htm.
• Andrew E. Lieberman, Bringing Mayan Language and Culture Across the Digital Divide,” Academy for Educational Development, Profiles in Developmenty, TechKnowLogia, July-September 2002.
• Bonnie A. Nardi & Vicki L. O'Day, Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart, MIT Press, 2000.
• Valerie Alia, Un/Covering the North: News, Media, and Aboriginal People, University of British Columbia Press, 2000.
• Fiona Alice Miller, The Gender of Genetic Futures: The Canadian Biotechnology Strategy, Women, and Health: Proceedings of a National Strategic Workshop Held at York University, February 11-12, 2000, National Network on Environments and Women's Health (Canada), 2000.
1990-1999:
• Matiation, Nicole. "A Plea for Time: Northern Aboriginal Peoples Advocate for the Right to Communicate on the Information Highway. Master's Thesis, Department of Communication Studies, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, April 13, 1999.
• Magdalena A.K. Muir, Analysis of the Inuvialuit Final Agreement and marine protected areas under the Oceans Act, Report Prepared for the FJMC, International Energy, Environmental and Legal Services Ltd, Calgary, 1997.
• Joël Demay, The Persistence and Creativity of Canadian Aboriginal Newspapers, Canadian Journal of Communication 18, No 1 (1993).
• Freeman, Milton M.R., Eleanor E. Wein and Darren E. Keith, Recovering Rights: Bowhead Whales and Inuvialuit Subsistence in the Western Canadian Arctic, University of Alberta Press, Studies on Whaling No. 2, Edmonton, 1992.
• Joël Demay, Clarifying Ambiguities: The Rapidly Changing Life of the Canadian Aboriginal Print Media, The Canadian Journal of Native Studies XI, 1 (1991): 95-112.
Undated
• Wikipedia entries on: "Arctic Resources Race," "Broken-Backed War Theory," "Daniel Quinn," "Geopolitics of the Arctic," "Kendall Island Migratory Bird Sanctuary," "Michael N. Nagler," "Military History of Canada," "Muktuk," "Polar Seas," "Provinces and Territories of Canada" and "2008 Tibetan Unrest."
• Andrew E. Lieberman, "Taking Ownership: Strengthening Indigenous Cultures and Languages," LearnLink, Academy for Educational Development, Undated.
Conference, Quarterly and Annual Reports
• Conference Report: Interim Governments: Institutional Bridges to Peace and Democracy? Report author; written for Professors Jessica Piombo and Karen Guttieri, NPS (January 2006)
• Conference Report: Terrorism Financing & State Responses in Comparative Perspective. Report author; written for Professors Jeanne Giraldo and Harold Trinkunas, NPS (January 2005)
• Conference Report: Dissuasion in U.S. Defense Strategy. Co-written with Professor Peter R. Lavoy and Research Associate Christopher Clary, NPS(November 2004)
• Conference Report: Capabilities-Based Defense Planning: Building a 21st Century Force. Co-written with Professor James Russell and Research Assistant Lashley Pulsipher, NPS (November 2004)
• Monthly Reports to the Board of Directors of Northern Native Broadcasting, Yukon, 1998-1999. Report(s) author.
• Annual Report and Quarterly Reports to the Board of Directors of the Native Communications Society, 1995-1998. Report(s) author.
• Tetlit Gwich’in Council Annual Report, 1993. Report author.
Book Editing Services
• Innovation, Transformation, and War: Counterinsurgency Operations in Anbar and Ninewa Provinces, Iraq, 2005-2007, Stanford University Press, 2010 (Copy editing, formatting.)
• Female Suicide Terrorism: A Comparative Study of Three Conflict Regions, Master's Thesis, Department of National Security Affairs, December 2009. (Copy editing, formatting.)
• Peoples of the Earth: Ethnonationalism, Democracy, and the Indigenous Challenge in “Latin” America, Lexington Books, 2009 (Indexing, formatting.)
• Innovation in the Crucible of War: The U.S. Counterinsurgency Campaign in Iraq, 2005-2007, Doctoral Thesis, Department of War Studies, King’s College, University of London, October, 2009 (Copy editing and formatting.)
• Globalization and WMD Proliferation: Terrorism, Transnational Networks and International Security, Routledge, December 2007. (Copy editing.)
Grants, Fellowships and Editorial Projects
2020s:
• 2023: $4,200 from the 2022-23 Project on America’s New Arctic Policy and Canada’s New Arctic Policy to author a 30,000 word report on North America’s New Arctic Policies.
• 2022: $40,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-April 15, 2022.
• 2021: $80,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-December 31, 2021.
• 2020: $79,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-December 31, 2020.
• 2020: $24,000 from the Fulbright Foundation to serve as a visiting Fulbright Scholar, Polar Law Centre, University of Akureyri
2010s:
• 2019: $78,000 from Class of 1965 Alumni Endowment at the United States Coast Guard Academy to serve as the rotating Class of 1965 Arctic Scholar from January 1-December 31, 2019.
• 2017: €32,400 from the Kone Foundation for research on “Tribal Buffer Zones and Regional Stability from the Polar to Oceanic Region: Understanding the Interface between Indigenous Homelands and Modern States, and the Foundations for Stable Borderlands”
• 2016: €32,400 from the Kone Foundation for research on “Tribal Buffer Zones and Regional Stability from the Polar to Oceanic Region: Understanding the Interface between Indigenous Homelands and Modern States”
• 2012: $25,380 from the Program for Culture and Conflict Studies (CCS) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) for categorizing and displaying data on the CCS website; editing various papers, including draft articles and reports; maintaining these data on the CCS website; updating the Index, Archive and Research pages; soliciting editing, and publishing articles in the Culture & Conflict Review; overseeing and editing the CCS book series; and assisting with various web, IT and editorial issues and projects.
• 2011: $20,820 from the Program for Culture and Conflict Studies (CCS) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) for categorizing and displaying data on the CCS website; editing various papers, including draft articles and reports; maintaining these data on the CCS website; updating the Index, Archive and Research pages; soliciting editing, and publishing articles in the Culture & Conflict Review; overseeing and editing the CCS book series; and assisting with various web, IT and editorial issues and projects.
• 2010: $24,000 to maintain, update, and post articles, course curricula, and departmental information to the websites of the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC), Department of National Security Affairs (NSA), and Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), and to edit the quarterly e-journal, Strategic Insights.
2000s:
• 2009: $40,950 to maintain, update, and post articles, course curricula, and departmental information to the websites of the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC), Department of National Security Affairs (NSA), and Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), and to edit the quarterly e-journal, Strategic Insights.
• 2008: $18,200.00 to maintain and enhance website materials in support of the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) including collecting, editing, and developing new content in support of RSEP on the website of the NPS Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) and National Security Affairs Department (NSA); to enhance reach-back capabilities of the site to better serve RSEP audiences; and to maintain up-to-date recommended online reading lists for various world regions and thematic issues for the Regional Security Education Program (RSEP), to be posted on the CCC website.
• 2007: $18,175 from the National Security Affairs Department (NSA) and the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to maintain and enhance website materials in support of the National Security Affairs (NSA) Department and the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) website including collecting, editing, and developing new content in support of the CCC website and maintaining online journal Strategic Insights (SIs).
• 2006: $30,000 from the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to assemble, produce, and disseminate research articles on the Naval Postgraduate School’s National Security Affairs Department and Center for Contemporary Conflict’s website; update and maintain current records on faculty biographies and NSA course descriptions; and update and maintain current online records for NSA’s Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) on the CCC/NSA website.
• 2005: $121,000 from Blanc + Otus Public Relations to author and edit the daily HP Competitive Intelligence in Action report.
• 2005: $24,000 from the IBM Applications on Demand (AoD) Group to provide technical editing service, primarily for software manuals.
• 2005: $10,000 to assemble, produce, and disseminate research articles on U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue; edit conference-related papers, working papers, and research materials following the CCC workshop on U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue; and maintain and produce web content on research topics supporting research on U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue.
• 2005: $6,500 to write an 8,000-word conference report and to prepare a transcript of the proceedings of the upcoming Center for Homeland Defense and Security workshop on Terrorism Finance and State Responses in Comparative Perspective.
• 2004: $70,000 from Hill and Knowlton Public Relations to author and edit the daily HP Competitive Intelligence in Action report.
• 2004: $51,000 from the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the Naval Postgraduate School (2004-05) to maintain and enhance website materials in support of the NPS Regional Security Education Program (RSEP) including collecting, editing, and developing new content in support of RSEP on the website of the NPS Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) and National Security Affairs Department (NSA).
• 2004: $35,000 from the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to manage the assembly, production and dissemination of research articles on Biological Weapons Threats to Homeland Security; and to write a conference report and edit conference papers for the CCC workshop on Dissuasion in the U.S. Defense Strategy.
1990s:
• 1999: $52,000 from Aboriginal Business Canada to produce a video profiling Aboriginal youth entrepreneurs in the Yukon and BC.
• 1999: $30,000 from the Tourism Marketing Fund to produce a television series pilot episode of Yukon Xtreme, an outdoor adventure show profiling extreme sports in the Yukon wilderness.
• 1999: $10,280 from the Yukon Territorial Government to provide media services for Team Yukon on the 1999 Team Canada trade mission to Osaka and Tokyo, Japan.
• 1999: $9,600 from the Trade and Investment Fund to represent NNBY at the Banff Television Festival and the Assembly of First Nation/Nexus aboriginal business trade show.
• 1999: $5,000 from the Aboriginal Healing Foundation to develop a community-based video project profiling women survivors of the residential school system.
• 1999: $1,200 from the Trade and Investment Fund to represent NNBY at the Prime Time television trade show in Ottawa.
• 1998: $218,000 from Telefilm Canada to produce the 1998 season of The No-Name Youth Show television series.
• 1998: $40,000 from the Government of the Northwest Territories (GNWT) to produce the Dene Weekly Perspective television news show.
• 1998: $25,000 from the GNWT to support Aboriginal language broadcasting on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1998: $7,500 from the Canada Council of the Arts to support publication of an aboriginal arts section in the Cabin Fever newspaper.
• 1997: $60,000 from the GNWT to introduce a television training program for Aboriginal youth, who contributed local segments to The No-Name Youth Show television series.
• 1997: $12,000 from the NWT Language Enhancement Program to produce a six-month Aboriginal language lesson series on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1996: $201,000 from Human Resources Development Canada to introduce a television training program for Aboriginal youth, who contributed local segments to The No-Name Youth Show.
• 1996: $12,000 from the GNWT’s Aboriginal Language Literacy Program to produce Aboriginal language lessons on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1996: $7,000 from the GNWT’s Language Enhancement Fund to produce a segment of the Spirit of Denendeh documentary television series called Teepee Talks, presenting stories told by Dene elders inside a traditional teepee around a campfire.
• 1996: $3,000 from the Cultural Enhancement Program to produce two television episodes for CNN International on northern issues.
• 1995: $252,000 from NorthwesTel to contribute to the production of the Dene Weekly Perspective television news show.
• 1995: $51,000 from the GNWT’s Department of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources to produce two one-hour television documentaries on saving energy in the home.
• 1995: $40,000 from the GNWT’s Cultural Enhancement Program to produce Aboriginal language lessons for broadcast on Television Northern Canada.
• 1995: $10,000 from the GNWT’s Aboriginal Language Literacy Program to produce Aboriginal language lessons on CKLB-FM radio.
• 1995: $5,000 from the GNWT’s Oral Traditions Program to record and broadcast traditional Dene love stories and songs.
• 1994: $28,000 from the NYU Center for War, Peace, and the News Media for research on post-Cold War news coverage of war and peace issues.
• 1993: $3,000 contract from the Tetlit Gwich’in Council of Fort McPherson, NWT to write their annual report, which involved spending one month in the community interviewing residents, elders, and tribal leaders, producing in a lengthy (60 pp) report on the first year of the Tetlit Gwich’in land-claim implementation.
• 1992: $45,000 from the GNWT’s Language Enhancement Program to introduce a new bilingual (Inuvialuktun/English) format for Tusaayaksat newspaper, becoming the only newspaper in Western Canada to publish in an aboriginal language.
• 1992: $43,000 research grant from the Canadian Institute for International Peace and Security (CIIPS) for “Decision-Making Structures in Land Claims Settlement Areas: Implications for Sovereignty and Security,” to better understand the dynamics of decision-making inside land claims settlement areas; to determine how co-management and devolution affect sovereignty-assertion and national security in the Arctic; and to engage in a comparative analysis of the Alaska, Inuvialuit and Inuit land claims settlements and their respective decision-making structures, using a case-study review in three settlement areas with additional comparison of James Bay and Northern Quebec settlements.
• 1992: $7,000 from the Inuvialuit/Government of Canada Joint Secretariat (a land claims implementation body) to research, write, design, and publish a pictorial history of the Inuvialuit bowhead harvest of 1991.
• 1991: $23,000 pilot project from the Language Enhancement Program to develop a bilingual format for the Inuvialuit newspaper, Tusaayaksat, and to train news translators fluent in Inuvialuktun dialects to speedily translate news stories for biweekly publication.
1980s:
• 1987: Institute on Global Conflict & Cooperation (1987-88): $12,000 predoctoral fellowship to conduct research on the strategic and theoretical foundations of nuclear strategy.
• 1986: Institute on Global Conflict & Cooperation (1986-87): $10,000 predoctoral fellowship to conduct research on the strategic and theoretical foundations of nuclear strategy (deferred).
• 1985: MacArthur Foundation (1985-86): $9,600 predoctoral international security fellowship from the MacArthur Foundation.
• 1983: Program on Nonviolent Sanctions in Conflict and Defense, Harvard University (1983): Research Assistant for Gene Sharp, the pioneering and innovative theorist of nonviolent strategic change, during the summer of 1983.
• 1983: Study of War Project (1983): Participated in a summer-long independent study under the tutelage of social psychologist and conflict resolution pioneer Herbert C. Kelman on the origins of war, utilizing Quincy Wright's classic tome as its primary text.
• 1983: Department of Government, Harvard University (1983): Research Assistant to professors John D. (Jack) Montgomery and Kent Calder at the International Dimensions of Land Reform project.
• 1982: Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Harvard University (1982): Research Assistant to professors Sallie Baliunas and John Raymond at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
• 1981: Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Harvard University (1981-82): Manager of the Michael Telescope Observatory, Harvard Science Center.