2017
DOI: 10.1111/ropr.12257
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Is a Melting Arctic Making the Arctic Council Too Cool? Exploring the Limits to the Effectiveness of a Boundary Organization

Abstract: The Arctic Council offers an interesting and unexplored case study of boundary work between policy makers, scientific communities, and Indigenous organizations in the circumpolar region. Its notable success can be attributed to the production of high‐quality policy products, including the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment and the Arctic Human Development Report—both of which meet the criteria of boundary objects. However, this article goes beyond applying the concept of the boundary organization to inform our u… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Aforismen er omtalt som «the first law of ecology» (Commoner, 1971) og er velkjent hos flere urfolkskulturer (f.eks. Spence, 2017), som fremholder at innsikten om komplekse sammenhenger innebaerer at vi må tenke holistisk rundt problemer og løsninger.…”
Section: En Politikk For Dagens Utfordringer?unclassified
“…Aforismen er omtalt som «the first law of ecology» (Commoner, 1971) og er velkjent hos flere urfolkskulturer (f.eks. Spence, 2017), som fremholder at innsikten om komplekse sammenhenger innebaerer at vi må tenke holistisk rundt problemer og løsninger.…”
Section: En Politikk For Dagens Utfordringer?unclassified
“…The contribution by Holzscheiter () unravels the potentially negative conflicts and redundancies that a proliferation of boundary concepts can create. The contribution by Spence () also indicates a trade‐off between boundary work and decision making: the more sophisticated boundary work an institution seems to perform, the less it will have decision‐making power, as illustrated in the case of the Arctic Council. A balance between boundary work and decision‐making functions has to be reached.…”
Section: Research Frontiers and Policy Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…IR studies of boundary organizations indicate that knowledge can be produced and brought into the debates by actors other than scientists or policy makers. In her contribution to this special issue on boundary work performed by the Arctic Council, Spence (2017) clearly demonstrates this shift from a classical understanding of science to an effort to include other sorts of knowledge into the equation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To better connect scientific and policy communities, scholars have examined the critical roles played by boundary organizations (Cash, ; Guston, ; Jasanoff, ; Swedlow, ). Such organizations help connect scientists with policy makers by fostering common understanding and knowledge building to inform policy making (Guston, ; Spence, ). Collaborative groups may act as boundary organizations, to the extent they include scientists and nonscientists working together to bridge the science–policy divide.…”
Section: Use Of Science In Collaborative Planning and Government Polimentioning
confidence: 99%