The Arctic Institute Bookshelf Podcast
66 episodes — Page 2 of 2
Sara Olsvig, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Sara Olsvig, a Member of Danish Parliament representing Greenland. Sara talks about the challenges and opportunities that Greenland faces as it looks towards greater independence and a still more prominent role in Arctic issues. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Grete Hovelsrud, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Grete Hovelsrud, Research Director at the Nordland Research Institute and Senior Researcher at the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo, Norway. In this interview, she covers her experiences with local communities adapting to climate change, and shares some of the interesting skills she's acquired that have helped her in her research. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Aleqa Hammond, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Aleqa Hammond, member of Greenlandic Parliament and the first woman to lead Greenland's Siumut party. Aleqa talks about her homeland's possible future and about her unique position as a woman in Greenlandic politics. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Marianne Falardeau, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Marianne Falardeau, a Master's candidate at Universite Laval, about the changes that can be expected in Arctic marine life as the Arctic climate changes. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Kathrin Keil, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Kathrin Keil about how important it is both to accept that the Arctic is a complex region and to give our policy conversations a commensurate level of nuance. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Rasmus Bertelsen, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Rasmus Bertelsen about the crucial importance of human capital development as part of any sustainable development plan for Arctic communities. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
R Andreas Kraemer, Arctic Frontiers 2013
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Andreas Kraemer about the challenges of bridging the military-civilian line in Arctic policy discussions. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Ingrid Wiedmann, Doctoral Candidate in Arctic Marine Ecology at the University of Tromso
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Ingrid Wiedmann about the necessity of finding a balance between economic development of Arctic communities and preservation of Arctic ecological systems. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Malte Humpert, Executive Director of The Arctic Institute
For Arctic Frontiers 2013, we're speaking with attendees, speakers and guests of the conference about their work and their hopes for the future Arctic. In this interview, we hear from Malte Humpert about the role of Asian countries in the Arctic and the importance of engaging a younger generation of Arctic researchers. Follow along with us at www.arcticfrontiers.com or www.thearcticinstitute.org. This series is a joint effort of Arctic Frontiers, the Geopolitics in the High North program and The Arctic Institute.
Ruth Davis - Save the Arctic Part 2
In this podcast, part 3 of 3, Tom Fries talks with Ruth Davis, Senior Political Advisor to Greenpeace International, about the organization's "Save the Arctic" campaign. There are a couple of tough questions to answer: First; why does Greenpeace feel that non-Arctic people should have a significant say in what happens in the Arctic? Second; if subsurface development in the Arctic is to be stopped, what alternative industries does Greenpeace think might help Northern communities flourish? These and many other difficult issues arise when "outsiders" try to influence what happens in the Arctic.
Ruth Davis - Save the Arctic Part 1
Ruth Davis - Save the Arctic Part 1 by The Arctic Institute Bookshelf Podcast
Ruth Davis - Prirazlomnoye
Ruth Davis, Chief Policy Advisor for Greenpeace UK, discusses some details of Greenpeace's recent Prirazlomnoye action.
Interview with Leanne Robinson
Leanne Robinson works with the Arctic Energy Alliance in Yellowknife in Canada's Northwest Territories. I had the chance to enjoy an in-depth conversation with Leanne about her work researching and, where appropriate, promoting the use of renewable energy in the Northwest Territories. She is a wealth of knowledge, and has a balanced viewpoint as to the advantages and the challenges that go along with renewable energy, particularly as a resource for remote communities. Listen to learn about the conditions that make hydrocarbon use necessary and affordable in the NWT, and about the renewable technologies that may one day supplant hydrocarbons in these communities, perhaps making life a more sustainable proposition.
Interview with Yuri Sergeev
In February 2012, The Arctic Institute contributor Tom Fries interviewed Yuri Sergeev about his work for the Bellona Foundation's offices in Murmansk, Russia. Yuri talks frankly about the many intractable challenges that confront the development of renewable energy in the Russian Arctic, and in Russia generally, focusing largely on regulatory uncertainty and simple lack of economic incentives to make the switch. Yuri's many stories paint a picture of a country with enormous potential, waiting for the right moment to become a formidable producer.
Interview with Nina Jensen
In February 2012, Arctic Institute contributor Tom Fries interviewed Nina Jensen, Conservation Director at WWF-Norway, about the challenges of pushing back against the habit of fossil fuel production and use in the high North. Her long time work with WWF has given her a sense of the daunting challenges that confront those who support an as-soon-as-possible conversion to renewable energy, but also of the deep value of such a change. You can find a non-flash version of the interview here.
Interview with Jason Meyer
During the Arctic Frontiers conference in Tromso, Norway in January 2012, Arctic Institute contributor Tom Fries had the chance to interview Jason Meyer, who works at the Alaska Center for Energy and Power. His work involves identifying and testing new and effective energy technologies for the Arctic - often with the goal of providing power to Alaska's remote communities - and assisting them through the development process. His interest in this field began in Vanuatu, an island in the South Pacific where the local communities have some surprising commonalities with Alaska's remote towns. These days, his work brings him into contact both with the complexities of intellectual property law and with the promise of exciting new developmental technologies.