Arctic Watch

Facts About the Arctic

Meteor shower and Northern Lights over Snæfellsnes glacier, Iceland. Photo: Diana Robinson
Analysis

Arctic Lens: Revealing Hidden Global Patterns

There is a story we tell ourselves about the Arctic. Every Arctic expert knows it by heart. It began in Murmansk, 1987, when Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev gave a speech that would later be inscribed as a founding moment in Arctic cooperation. It offered the promise of the Arctic as a zone of peace, disarmament, and science to protect the Arctic environment in light of the decade’s zeitgeist and optimism toward international law, economic (liberal) cooperation, and the emergence of terms such as “sustainable development.” We were all primed to have reached the end of history.

The Birth of Arctic Exceptionalism: A Story Told and Retold

What followed became the spine of what many of us now refer to as “Arctic exceptionalism”: the early 1990s Finnish initiative, the Arctic Environmental Protection Strategy, the creation of the Arctic Council in 1996, the rise of Indigenous representation (although Indigenous peoples had been politically organising in the Arctic at least since the late 1970s, outside the region since the time of the League of Nations, and Indigenous resistance since the onset of colonisation), the institutional layering of chairships and declarations (or lack thereof), the careful choreography of consensus-ish even when global politics fractured elsewhere. It is a story that has been repeated so many times, it is now part of the canon of Arctic governance. And like any good story, its power lies not in what it says, but in how it is told.

The Myth-Making Machine: How Arctic Cooperation Became a Global Ideal

This is not accidental. The architecture of this Arctic story has become mythical. The Arctic is cast as the setting for a drama of international harmony. Arctic cooperation became narrated through the idea of Arctic exceptionalism: an idea that relationships in the region could be sheltered from geopolitics elsewhere. The normative claim of this narrative is that there is a possibility, in the emerging global age, to avoid the reoccurrence of a Cold War–style, East-West confrontation, by bringing into political existence the best version of the Arctic as an “exceptional” region. Again, like any good story, it had its detractors‏. International relations scholars and practitioners who would question, sometimes with accuracy, whether the Arctic was truly geopolitically exceptional or if governance in the region barely reflected the world order. At the start of the war in Ukraine, most of us were met with a “told you so!” from more realist colleagues.

Meteor shower and Northern Lights over Snæfellsnes glacier, Iceland. Photo: Diana Robinson
Meteor shower and Northern Lights over Snæfellsnes glacier, Iceland. Photo: Diana Robinson

Like any good story, the myth of Arctic exceptionalism still endures. The explanation is rather simple: it follows the familiar arc of heroic narrative: a visionary call, an assembly of characters, a moment or moments of crisis, a rise through trials and, at least for now, a work toward the restoration of balance. It contains all the elements of enduring myth: hope, danger, transformation, and moral clarity.

The Danger of Believing the Story Too Much

The myth can be seen as a normative concept that prescribes the Arctic as a unique region with a set of unwritten rules, beliefs and history that have given it a degree of immunity to many of the world’s geopolitical problems. However, as any myth told and retold through countless generations, some aspects were misunderstood, and along the way, we potentially conflated the health of a small, peripheral political and scientific body for the health of Arctic governance itself. We mistook what could be achieved with the limited tools available. Even the geopolitics that came crashing on the Arctic’s doorstep in 2022, which suspended the work of the Arctic Council, was narratively absorbed. The Council is not broken, we are told. It is paused. It will resume. It has resumed in limited capacity. The story goes on and the gavel is passed. That is not to say the Arctic Council is not important; far from it. However, it is only one aspect of what makes the Arctic exceptional. The real question is what happens when the myth outlives its capacity to explain what truly occurs in the region?

The persistence of this narrative structure has, in recent years, become a form of conceptual inertia. It has allowed Arctic governance to remain anchored in a self-image that no longer reflects the region’s political or ecological realities. The Arctic of 1987 and 1996 is no more. This is no longer a periphery, even when, too often, it still feels like it is in states’ foreign policy. And, for the people in the region it never was. It is central to global climatic systems, to shifting patterns of economic investment, to the geostrategic calculations of state and corporate actors. The region is marked by new forms of extraction, new technologies of surveillance and intervention, and new claims to resources to serve in the so-called green transition (we all need the critical minerals, you see?!). These are not outside disruptions. They are part of the Arctic now.

The Inertia of an Outdated Self-Image

And yet, the language of exceptionalism lingered. The notion that the Arctic can remain somehow above politics, or at least adjacent to tensions, persists in public statements and institutional documents. Of course, this rhetorical insulation is narratively convenient. It allows actors to defer difficult questions, about militarisation, sometimes about Indigenous rights or about our shared (non-)extractive futures, mostly because they do not fit the mythic arc. But the Arctic was never truly insulated. The peace it projected was always partial, the cooperation conditional, the exclusions structured. To say “the Arctic is exceptional. Period.” therefore lacks nuances. This is not to say that there are not serious academic debates going on about whether Arctic exceptionalism went away in 2022 but, rather, what we need to develop is a more complex story about the production of the myth itself and the outcomes no one could have predicted when the myth first formed in the late 1990s. Arguing against the old blanket exceptionalism and for a renewed engagement of why exactly the Arctic remains “exceptional” beyond geopolitics does not diminish the real achievements of Arctic diplomacy. On the contrary, it acknowledges that the myth, if left unexamined, can become a form of forgetting.

Rewriting the Arctic Exceptionalism Narrative for Today’s Realities

To insist “the Arctic is exceptional. Period.” is to oversimplify. Rather than discard the idea, we must refine it. A renewed Arctic exceptionalism should not be defined by the absence of conflict or frozen in a 1990s political framework. Instead, it must emphasize people-to-people cooperation, political imagination, and a serious engagement with climate threats and sustainability.

We need to retell the story by centering Arctic communities’ lived realities, ensuring Indigenous governance is constitutive, not merely consultative. This reframing links environmental protection with justice and grounds diplomacy in epistemic humility. It pluralizes Arctic exceptionalism(s), highlighting what’s truly at stake: the Arctic’s role in safeguarding life on Earth through global cooperation.

Beyond Myth: Arctic Exceptionalism as Mirror and Method

Reconsidering Arctic exceptionalism is not an act of rejection but of deep reflection. It should not become a tragedy of lost innocence or a simplistic tale of scientific diplomacy. Instead, we need a more nuanced narrative that embraces the Arctic as a space of contestation and cohabitation—a region where peace and sustainability are interdependent.

In this reframed story, Arctic exceptionalism functions both as a mirror reflecting the contradictions of global governance and as a method for imagining alternative futures. It becomes a practice of diplomacy that resists defaulting to “security at all costs” while facing present challenges with integrity.

By adopting this lens, Arctic exceptionalism evolves into an anticipatory mode of governance—a “provisional collective grammar” through which Arctic actors can articulate imperfect but sincere modes of cooperation. This cooperation does not require full consensus but demands unwavering commitment. Fragile as it may be, Arctic exceptionalism(s) deserve to be built and rebuilt, not because the Arctic is inherently different, but because it demonstrates how differences can be understood and navigated.

1 COMMENTS

  1. This is such an important conversation! The idea that the Arctic could stand apart from global conflicts is incredibly hopeful. It’s crucial we focus on building strong partnerships in this region, ensuring it remains a place where diplomacy and cooperation flourish.

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *