New Issue Available
Polar Research Volume 28, Number 1, April 2009
Special Edition on Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation, and
Vulnerability in the Arctic
For further information, please go to:
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118495134/home
The Norwegian Polar Institute announces the availability of a new issue
of Polar Research, Volume 28, Number 1, April 2009. The volume is a
special edition on change impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability in the
Arctic.
Edited by James Ford and Chris Furgal, the special edition features the
following manuscripts:
Climate impacts, adaptation and vulnerability in the Arctic
By: James D. Ford and Chris FurgalCommunity Collaboration and Climate Change Research in the Canadian Arctic
By: Tristan Pearce et al.Arctic Climate Change Discourse: The Contrasting Politics of Research
Agendas in the West and Russia
By: Bruce Forbes and Florian StammlerCommunity Clusters in Wildlife and Environmental Management: Using
TEK and Community Involvement to Improve Co-Management in an Era of
Rapid Environmental Change
By: Martha DowsleyThe Role of Governance in Community Adaptation to Climate Change
By: E. Carina H. Keskitalo and Antonina A. KulyasovaA Reindeer Herder's Perspective on Caribou, Weather, and
Socio-Economic Change on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska
By: Kumi Rattenbury et al.Canadian Inuit Subsistence and Ecological Instability - If the
Climate Changes, Must the Inuit?
By: George WenzelVulnerability and Adaptation to Climate-Related Fire Impacts in Rural
and Urban Interior Alaska
By: Sarah Trainor et al.Demographic and Environmental Conditions are Uncoupled in the
Social-Ecological System of the Pribilof Islands
By: Henry Huntington et al.From Good to Eat to Good to Watch: Whale Watching, Adaptation and
Change in Icelandic Fishing Communities
By: Niels Einarsson
For further information about this special edition, please go to:
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118495134/home.