ARTICA WRITINGS 2019
The Spitsbergen Treaty seen from the Russian perspective
By Sergey Gushchin
On 9 February 2020 we mark the 100th anniversary of the Spitsbergen Treaty. This name for the archipelago, Spitsbergen, is fixed in the text and the title of the Treaty, so the Russian Federation prefers to adhere to the language of the Treaty by using this name.
Vladimir Rusanov’s expedition and Russian mining claims on Svalbard
By Daria Soldatova
At the start of the 20th century, there was a coal rush in Svalbard. Mining companies from many countries laid claim to large parts of Svalbard and started extracting coal. Norwegians, Englishmen, Americans and Swedes all took part in the rush.
Why did Norway get Svalbard?
By Sigri Sandberg
Day after day of sailing across vast oceans. Through cold winds, heading north, ever further north – and then finally something appears on the horizon: Mountains. Glaciers. Islands. Fjords. Land. Ice.
Managing minerals in Svalbard
By Janike Kampevold Larsen
These days, when we get off a plane or a boat in Svalbard, we immediately get a powerful sense of the landscape – mountains, open sea, masses of sand, volumes of ice, and rock combine in a way that is unparalleled on the mainland.
The Arctic Fellowship of the Rose on Oswaldo Maciá’s work of art: A gift to Svalbard (2019)
By Kjetil Røed
I’m in Svalbard and on my way to see Oswaldo Maciá’s work of art A gift to Svalbard. After a half hour bus journey from Longyearbyen across a dark snowy plain, I detect the former mine at Vinkelstasjonen, where Maciá’s work of art is exhibited. Like an otherworldly stage or an exotic plant, it is weakly illuminated in reddish, pinkish hues against the dark blue Polar night.
Life is Svalbard … and the Svalbard Treaty
By Vår Aunevik
I guess it all started at H&M in Tromsø.
Mum noticed that I was on my way, and maybe that’s the moment I developed my great interest in clothes and fashion. At H&M in Tromsø. Luckily I wasn’t born there; can you imagine if that had happened? Like: “Girl born in H&M”. No, that wouldn’t have been too popular, not with me, Mum, the customers or the employees.
Russia and the Svalbard Treaty
By Professor Sven G. Holtsmark
After other foreign interests withdrew during the 1920s and 1930s, there were two states left with a big presence of businesses and citizens on Svalbard: Norway and Russia (the Soviet Union until 1991). That is still the case, although the Russian presence has become much smaller in the decades since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The Svalbard Treaty celebrates its 100th anniversary in 2020
By Geir Ulfstein, Professor of International Law
When the Svalbard Treaty was ceremoniously signed at the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs on 9 February 1920, no-one could have imagined that it would be invoked in favour of the Latvian snow crab fishery in 2019. But the Norwegian Supreme Court’s judgement on that case, issued on 14 February this year, illustrates that the treaty remains both highly relevant – and at times controversial.
Where has all the culture gone?
By Marit Anne Hauan and Tora Hultgreen
Why do we lose sight of people and culture in the overall narrative about Svalbard? Climate change and environmental challenges have helped to give the Arctic and Svalbard a place in the global consciousness.
Ole Robert Sunde: Todalen, the top of mine no. 7 and Gruvelageret
By Ole Robert Sunde
What can laws and natural resource management tell us about our relationship with nature and our surroundings? The name of the art project “Wild Living Marine Resources Belong to Society as a Whole” comes from Section 2 of the Norwegian Marine Resources Act.