India in the Arctic: A multidimensional approach

Sinha Uttam Kumar
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The Arctic region has spectacular roots in Indian civilizational thinking and thus represents a familiar region. Shaped by its long association and significant expertise in the Antarctic Treaty System; its first scientific expedition to the Arctic Ocean in 2007 followed by the setting of the Arctic research base in 2008 and subsequently its Permanent Observer status in 2013, India’s dominant narrative remains scientific and polar research. But with summer in the Arctic arriving early and staying longer, accessibility to the vast natural resources and huge investment has significantly altered the geopolitical landscape of the Arctic region. The question of how to develop the resources in a sustainable and peaceful manner competes with the complex science of the Arctic and the unique risks that such commercial ventures pose. India’s reluctance to de-emphasize its scientific interest towards a more calibrated approach that takes into account the politico-strategic-economic dimensions in the Arctic reflects the tension between the exceptionalism and the realism of its polar legacy. The article assesses how the Arctic orientation is changing from a uni-dimensional to a dynamic and multidimensional engagement. The author argues that India’s Arctic approach is essentially binary: while indeed India has a stake in the governance of global commons and to cooperate with the littoral states for effective science policies, it also cares about sustainable resource development without making the Arctic region unstable.
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印度在北极:一个多维的方法
北极地区在印度文明思想中有着惊人的根基,因此代表了一个熟悉的地区。由于其在《南极条约系统》中的长期联系和丰富的专门知识而形成;2007年首次对北冰洋进行科学考察,2008年设立北极研究基地,随后在2013年获得永久观察员地位,印度的主导叙事仍然是科学和极地研究。但随着北极的夏天来得早、持续时间更长,丰富的自然资源和巨额投资的可及性极大地改变了北极地区的地缘政治格局。如何以可持续和和平的方式开发资源的问题与北极的复杂科学以及这种商业冒险所带来的独特风险相竞争。印度不愿弱化其科学兴趣,转而采取一种考虑到北极政治、战略和经济维度的更精确的方法,这反映了其极地遗产的例外主义和现实主义之间的紧张关系。本文评估了北极方向是如何从单一维度转变为动态和多维接触的。作者认为,印度的北极方法本质上是二元的:虽然印度在全球公域的治理和与沿海国家合作制定有效的科学政策方面确实有利害关系,但它也关心在不使北极地区不稳定的情况下可持续的资源开发。
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