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LANDRIAULT, MATHIEU (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   192893


Beyond Hans Island: the Canada–Denmark agreement's possible impact on mobility and continental shelves / Landriault, Mathieu; Pic, Pauline; Lasserre, Frederic   Journal Article
Lasserre, Frederic Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The governments of Canada and Denmark signed a historic agreement on Hans Island on 14 June 2022. Although most of the agreement was devoted to the resolution of the Hans Island dispute, it also settled other issues. We argue that provisions on mobility and the continental shelf in the Labrador Sea give rise to interesting precedents that could have far-reaching effects for northerners. The agreement on enhanced mobility could represent a first step in a more ambitious process of facilitating Inuit mobility across Nunavut and Greenland, while the settlement on the continental shelf illustrates how states could collaborate on other continental shelf cases, including the continental shelf in the Central Arctic Ocean.
Key Words Canada  Denmark  Greenland  Arctic  Continental Shelf  Inuit 
Hans Island 
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2
ID:   143519


Does standing up for sovereignty pay off politically? Arctic military announcements and governing party support in Canada from 2 / Landriault, Mathieu; Minard, Paul   Article
Minard, Paul Article
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Summary/Abstract The defence of Arctic sovereignty has gathered high levels of support from the Canadian population in the past 40 years. However, the relationship between public opinion and decision makers is more ambiguous, in particular that between decisions taken by the governing party and an effect in the general population. This is especially true for foreign policy issues. Hence, this article offers a test to assess whether standing up for Arctic sovereignty translates into concrete political gains for the governing party. We gathered federal party support levels reported in 859 opinion polls conducted from 2006 to 2014 in Canada. By focusing on sovereignty operations held by National Defence Operations NUNALIVUT and NANOOK and aggregating poll results into a “poll of polls,” we found that standing up for Arctic sovereignty is politically profitable in certain circumstances.
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3
ID:   159855


Opening a new ocean: Arctic Ocean fisheries regime as a (potential) turning point for Canada’s Arctic policy / Landriault, Mathieu   Journal Article
Landriault, Mathieu Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This policy brief focuses on the opening of the Central Arctic Ocean and the subsequent questions this poses to regional governance. This change has the potential to radically alter the nature of Arctic governance as non-Arctic states will have to play a significant role in the rules that will apply in the Arctic high seas. Talks about a regional fisheries regime will define the future of this region. The creation of a coordinating agreement would have the benefit of not challenging Arctic states too fundamentally while at the same time incorporating non-Arctic states in a meaningful way in the regional governance infrastructure.
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