Self-determination, Inuit Sovereignty and Nation-State Building in the Arctic: Making Greenland Understandable
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Lecture and oral contribution
Uffe Jakobsen - Speaker
- Department of Political Science
- Political Theory
Sovereignty includes the right to self-determination. But does Inuit sovereignty include national identity formation or does it transcend nationality? This paper will argue that there is not a once and for all answer to this question, since it depends on place (context) and time (past and future). Self-determination in Nunavut did not entail a separation from Canada and the establishment of an independent state (Hicks and White 2000), while self-determination in Greenland does include the perspective of an independent and sovereign state according to the constituent Greenland Self-Government Act (2009). Earlier, however, Inuit Ataqatigiit and other political parties would see an inuit state as a circumpolar organisation based on a circumpolar Inuit identity. Has Greenland since then in the views of the political parties as well as the indigenous majority population developed into a ‘nation’ and is it to be understood as, so far, a nation without a ‘state’, a stateless nation?
13 Nov 2015
Event (Conference)
Title | Security and Governance in the Globalised Arctic:Nordic and International Perspectives |
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Date | 12/11/2015 → 13/11/2015 |
Location | Aarhus Universitet |
City | Aarhus |
Country/Territory | Denmark |
ID: 154194049