ABSTRACT

This book addresses the growing demand for collaborative and reflexive scholarly engagement in the Arctic directed at providing relevant insights to tackle local challenges of arctic communities. It examines how arctic research can come to matter in new ways by combining methods and engagement in the field of inquiry in new and meaningful ways.  

Research informs decisions affecting the futures of arctic communities. Due to its ability to include local concerns and practices, collaborative research could play a greater role in this process. By way of example of how to bring new voices to the fore in research, this edited collection presents experiences of researchers active in collaborative arctic research. It draws multidisciplinary perspectives from a broad range of academics in the fields such as law and medicine over tourism and business studies, planning and development, cultural studies, ethnology and anthropology. It also shares personal experiences of working in Greenland and with Greenlanders, whether communities, businesses and entrepreneurs, public officials and planners, patients or students.

Offering useful insights into the current problems of Greenland representative of the arctic region, this book will be beneficial for researchers and scientists involved in arctic research.

chapter 2|12 pages

Telling the good story

A conversation with Minik Rosing on research collaboration and research in Greenland

chapter 4|17 pages

Arctic Auto-ethnography

Unsettling colonial research relations

chapter 5|19 pages

Industrial development in Nuuk and Sermersooq

Empowerment through action research

chapter 7|15 pages

Critical proximity in Arctic research

Reflections from the Arctic Winter Games 2016 1

chapter 8|20 pages

Life Mapping

A collaborative approach to tourism collaboration in Greenland

chapter 10|17 pages

Recruiting and retaining labour in Greenland

A PhD project in close cooperation with local stakeholders