
Discourse in a modern Arctic: can we supplant sovereignty? – commentary to Pawliw, Berthold and Lasserre
Author(s) -
Alexandra Carleton
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
fennia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1798-5617
pISSN - 0015-0010
DOI - 10.11143/fennia.102004
Subject(s) - sovereignty , narrative , jurisdiction , wilderness , politics , environmental ethics , political science , the arctic , arctic , sociology , law , epistemology , philosophy , linguistics , ecology , oceanography , biology , geology
In this reflection I contemplate on the nature of claiming sovereignty over the Arctic through the political discourse, as used in the Harper administration. I question the mobilization of discourses to substantiate claims and lasting jurisdiction over the Arctic as the true nature of reconstructing narratives. In particular, whether the truer questions are how and why we seek sovereignty over areas of wilderness and why discourse is needed at all to legitimise the goodness of such claiming.