Institution
University of Lapland
Education•Rovaniemi, Finland•
About: University of Lapland is a education organization based out in Rovaniemi, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Arctic & Indigenous. The organization has 665 authors who have published 1870 publications receiving 39129 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Rovaniemi & Lapin yliopisto.
Topics: Arctic, Indigenous, Climate change, Tundra, Tourism
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Good research practices that may support researchers in selecting the best study designs where these are clear in the evidence base are identified.
Abstract: Mining activities, including prospecting, exploration, construction, operation, maintenance, expansion, abandonment, decommissioning and repurposing of a mine can impact social and environmental systems in a range of positive and negative, and direct and indirect ways. Mining can yield a range of benefits to societies, but it may also cause conflict, not least in relation to above-ground and sub-surface land use. Similarly, mining can alter environments, but remediation and mitigation can restore systems. Boreal and Arctic regions are sensitive to impacts from development, both on social and environmental systems. Native ecosystems and aboriginal human communities are typically affected by multiple stressors, including climate change and pollution, for example. We will search a suite of bibliographic databases, online search engines and organisational websites for relevant research literature using a tested search strategy. We will also make a call for evidence to stakeholders that have been identified in the wider 3MK project (
https://osf.io/cvh3u/
). We will screen identified and retrieved articles at two distinct stages (title and abstract, and full text) according to a predetermined set of inclusion criteria, with consistency checks at each level to ensure criteria can be made operational. We will then extract detailed information relating to causal linkages between actions or impacts and measured outcomes, along with descriptive information about the articles and studies and enter data into an interactive systematic map database. We will visualise this database on an Evidence Atlas (an interactive, cartographic map) and identify knowledge gaps and clusters using Heat Maps (cross-tabulations of important variables, such as mineral type and studied impacts). We will identify good research practices that may support researchers in selecting the best study designs where these are clear in the evidence base.
53 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, alternative proposals for an Arctic Treaty that have been put forward by scholars and international organizations have been examined in depth to ascertain what is viable and what is problematic in each of them, which will help in outlining a new treaty that can accommodate both the political realities in the Arctic and the societal goals pursued in the region.
Abstract: This article examines the alternative proposals for an Arctic treaty that have been put forward by scholars and international organizations. The numerous proposals on record draw their inspiration from various sources: chief among these is the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS), but maritime regimes and even principles such as the common heritage of humankind are represented as well. The goal of the article is to examine the proposals in depth to ascertain what is viable and what is problematic in each. This analysis will help in outlining a new treaty that can accommodate both the political realities in the Arctic and the societal goals pursued in the region.
53 citations
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TL;DR: Testing in the European blackbird Turdus merula revealed that urbanization occurred earlier in partially migratory and resident populations than in migratory populations of blackbirds, consistent with the hypothesis that timing of urbanization is facilitated by partial migration, resulting in subsequent residency and population growth.
Abstract: Many organisms have invaded urban habitats, although the underlying factors initially promoting urbanization remain poorly understood. Partial migration may facilitate urbanization because such populations benefit from surplus food in urban environments during winter, and hence enjoy reduced fitness costs of migratory deaths. We tested this hypothesis in the European blackbird Turdus merula, which has been urbanized since the 19th century, by compiling information on timing of urbanization, migratory status, and population density for 99 cities across the continent. Timing of urbanization was spatially auto-correlated at scales up to 600 km. Analyses of timing of urbanization revealed that urbanization occurred earlier in partially migratory and resident populations than in migratory populations of blackbirds. Independently, this effect was most pronounced in the range of the distribution that currently has the highest population density, suggesting that urbanization facilitated population growth. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that timing of urbanization is facilitated by partial migration, resulting in subsequent residency and population growth.
52 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the recent norm-making method of soft law provides indigenous peoples with a better opportunity for influential participation than is afforded them by traditional methods, and that these peoples are to benefit from this opportunity, however, we must appreciate the revolutionary potential of the concept: a potential that is suffocated if the concept is understood only from the perspective of international law.
Abstract: Indigenous peoples regularly regard international law as a very important tool for the advancement of their political goals. This is most likely because in many nation-states their opportunities for influencing political development are rather limited. Even though international law seems to be an important means for indigenous peoples to advance their goals, these peoples should be aware of its inherent limitations. One such shortcoming is that international law seriously restricts indigenous peoples' opportunities to participate in the international law-making processes; that is treaty and customary law. The contention in this article is that the recent norm-making method of soft law provides indigenous peoples with a better opportunity for influential participation than is afforded them by traditional methods. If these peoples are to benefit from this opportunity, however, we must appreciate the revolutionary potential of the concept: a potential that is suffocated if the concept is understood only from the perspective of international law. A good example of indigenous peoples gaining a better standing in inter-governmental co-operation is the Arctic Council, which based its work on the soft-law approach from the outset. There would seem to be good prospects for adopting the Arctic Council's approach in other regions of the world in order to improve indigenous peoples' international representational status.
52 citations
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TL;DR: The role of observers under both the Arctic Environmental Protection Strategy (AEPS) and the Arctic Council (AC) before the Nuuk ministerial meeting that took place in May 2011 is studied in this article.
Abstract: This article studies the role of observers under both the Arctic Environmental Protection Strategy(AEPS) and the Arctic Council (AC) before the Nuuk ministerial meeting that took place in May 2011. In this meeting, the AC actors were able to find consensus on criteria for admitting new observers, an issue that has received much media attention, given that China and the European Union, for example, are queuing to become observers in the AC. It is of importance to examine the content of these recently adopted Nuuk observer rules and their potential to impact decision-making on whether the external actors can be included as observers. Moreover, this article studies how, if at all, the Nuuk observer rules might affect the position of the AC in the broader setting of circumpolar cooperation.
52 citations
Authors
Showing all 710 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hong Li | 103 | 779 | 42675 |
John C. Moore | 76 | 389 | 25542 |
Jeffrey M. Welker | 57 | 179 | 18135 |
Bruce C. Forbes | 43 | 130 | 7984 |
Mats A. Granskog | 41 | 141 | 5023 |
Manfred A. Lange | 38 | 92 | 4256 |
Liisa Tyrväinen | 37 | 112 | 6649 |
Samuli Helama | 35 | 156 | 4008 |
Aslak Grinsted | 34 | 89 | 9653 |
Jukka Jokimäki | 31 | 93 | 4175 |
Sari Stark | 29 | 58 | 2559 |
Elina Lahelma | 27 | 86 | 2217 |
Jonna Häkkilä | 25 | 97 | 2185 |
Rupert Gladstone | 23 | 51 | 2320 |
Justus J. Randolph | 23 | 66 | 2160 |