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Though it has been home for centuries to indigenous peoples who
have mastered its conditions, the Arctic has historically proven to
be a difficult region for governments to administer. Extreme
temperatures, vast distances, and widely dispersed patterns of
settlement have made it impossible for bureaucracies based in
far-off capitals to erect and maintain the kind of infrastructure
and institutions that they have built elsewhere. As climate change
transforms the polar regions, this book seeks to explore how the
challenges of governance are developing and being met in Alaska,
the Canadian Far North, and Greenland, while also drawing upon
lessons from the region's past. Though the experience of each of
these jurisdictions is unique, their place within democratic,
federal systems and the prominence within each of them of issues
relating to the rights of indigenous peoples situates them as part
of an identifiably 'North American Arctic.' Today, as this volume
shows, their institutions are evolving to address contemporary
issues of security, environmental protection, indigenous rights,
and economic development.
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