Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1139Hits:19076659Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID124758
Title ProperBritain and the British Antarctic Territory in the wider geopolitics of the Antarctic and the Southern Ocean
LanguageENG
AuthorDodds, Klaus ;  Hemmings, Alan D
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Britain's contemporary and future relationship with the British Antarctic Territory and the wider region is the subject matter of this article. In the aftermath of the ill-fated plans for a merger of British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and the National Oceanography Centre, it is timely to ask how the UK projects influence and secures its scientific, resource and strategic interests. The contemporary Antarctic is increasingly characterized by tension over resource management and conservation politics as Antarctic Treaty parties disagree, both in private and public, over the purpose of legal instruments and the regulation of activities such as fishing and marine conservation. While we do not predict the collapse of the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS), our analysis suggests that the effectiveness and legitimacy of the ATS is increasingly under challenge. The United Kingdom's position as a claimant state and original signatory to the Antarctic Treaty is complicated by the presence of counter-claimants (Argentina and Chile) and a wider preoccupation with other overseas territories, such as South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands and the Falkland Islands. Polar science, carried out by BAS and other British agents, remains critical not only for maintaining the UK's 'soft power' but also increasingly for cementing a 'strategic presence' in the Antarctic. The article ends with a cautionary note: scientific excellence is no longer sufficient to guarantee geopolitical/strategic interests and there is growing evidence that claimant and non-claimant states alike are no longer regarding Antarctica as an area that will remain free of intensifying and diversifying resource exploitation.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Affairs Vol.89, No.6; 2013: p.1429-1444
Journal SourceInternational Affairs Vol.89, No.6; 2013: p.1429-1444
Key WordsBritain ;  United Kingdom - UK ;  British Antarctic Territory - BAT ;  British Antarctic Survey - BAS ;  Antarctic Treaty System - ATS ;  Argentina ;  Chile ;  South America ;  Latin America ;  Foreign Policy - UK ;  Counter-Claimants ;  National Oceanography Centre - UK ;  Scientific, Resource ;  Strategic Interests ;  South Georgia ;  South Sandwich Islands ;  Falkland Islands ;  Polar Science ;  Geopolitical - Strategic Interests ;  Southern Sea ;  Antarctica ;  Strategy ;  Defense Strategy


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text