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Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization

The Arctic has been understood as a region separated from international relations, where states choose to collaborate and maintain stability (Gjørv et al. 2020: 2). This has led to the creation of the concept of “Arctic Exceptionalism” (Heininen 2019: 226). Currently, the Arctic is becoming strategi...

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Main Author: Hagen, Victoria Berg
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hagen, Victoria Berg
author_browse Hagen, Victoria Berg
author_facet Hagen, Victoria Berg
author_sort Hagen, Victoria Berg
collection Thesis
description The Arctic has been understood as a region separated from international relations, where states choose to collaborate and maintain stability (Gjørv et al. 2020: 2). This has led to the creation of the concept of “Arctic Exceptionalism” (Heininen 2019: 226). Currently, the Arctic is becoming strategically important. Furthermore, the region is witnessing militarization and increased international tensions affecting the Arctic states (Padrtova 2020: 38). This thesis analyzes how Arctic exceptionalism, as reflected in bilateral relations (specifically Russia-Finland and Russia-Norway), has been impacted by the Donbas War, the invasion of Ukraine, and militarization in the Arctic by both NATO and Russia. This thesis addresses these case studies by examining the historical and current relations between the states through the lenses of Walt’s (1987) balance of threat and constructivism. This thesis finds that security dynamics outside of the region have impacted Russia’s relations with Finland and Norway, but this thesis argues that this threat perception is rooted in their historical relations about the “other”. Through analyzing their relations using historical pattern analysis and the lens of balance of threat, this thesis concludes that Arctic exceptionalism was never about a region that is separated from international relations. Rather, it was a strategy to navigate their security concerns about the “other” in line with the theory of realism and using “liberalism” as an instrument. Constructivism provides a lens in understanding that “Arctic exceptionalism” failed to build the norm in erasing historical security perceptions leading to the demise of the notion (strategy) under changing circumstances.
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id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3782
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:03.647Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3782 Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization Hagen, Victoria Berg The Arctic has been understood as a region separated from international relations, where states choose to collaborate and maintain stability (Gjørv et al. 2020: 2). This has led to the creation of the concept of “Arctic Exceptionalism” (Heininen 2019: 226). Currently, the Arctic is becoming strategically important. Furthermore, the region is witnessing militarization and increased international tensions affecting the Arctic states (Padrtova 2020: 38). This thesis analyzes how Arctic exceptionalism, as reflected in bilateral relations (specifically Russia-Finland and Russia-Norway), has been impacted by the Donbas War, the invasion of Ukraine, and militarization in the Arctic by both NATO and Russia. This thesis addresses these case studies by examining the historical and current relations between the states through the lenses of Walt’s (1987) balance of threat and constructivism. This thesis finds that security dynamics outside of the region have impacted Russia’s relations with Finland and Norway, but this thesis argues that this threat perception is rooted in their historical relations about the “other”. Through analyzing their relations using historical pattern analysis and the lens of balance of threat, this thesis concludes that Arctic exceptionalism was never about a region that is separated from international relations. Rather, it was a strategy to navigate their security concerns about the “other” in line with the theory of realism and using “liberalism” as an instrument. Constructivism provides a lens in understanding that “Arctic exceptionalism” failed to build the norm in erasing historical security perceptions leading to the demise of the notion (strategy) under changing circumstances. 2026-02-15T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2720 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3782/viewcontent/victoria_berg_hagen_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Arctic security security strategy Arctic exceptionalism Russia Finland Norway International Relations
spellingShingle Arctic security
security strategy
Arctic exceptionalism
Russia
Finland
Norway
International Relations
Hagen, Victoria Berg
Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization
title Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization
title_full Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization
title_fullStr Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization
title_full_unstemmed Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization
title_short Security in The Arctic: The Decline of Arctic Exceptionalism? Between Cooperation and Militarization
title_sort security in the arctic the decline of arctic exceptionalism between cooperation and militarization
topic Arctic security
security strategy
Arctic exceptionalism
Russia
Finland
Norway
International Relations
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2720
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3782/viewcontent/victoria_berg_hagen_thesis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT hagenvictoriaberg securityinthearcticthedeclineofarcticexceptionalismbetweencooperationandmilitarization