Examines the motivations and the practice of polar research, with special reference to the Antarctic. It introduces a concept of institutional motives, reviews some of the driving factors in modern polar research and considers some similarities and differences between Arctic and Antarctic science, mainly to highlight the latter. External political conditions that form the framework within which polar research is done today, differ considerably in the two regions. In the Arctic the exertion of national sovereignty, as well as military and economic interests in a number of countries have hindered the far-reaching international co-operation in science found in the Antarctic. At the same time these factors have contributed to a fragmentation of knowledge production, while in the Antarctic, an international treaty arrangement which suspends territorial claims and emphasizes research has created conditions favourable to basic research. The focus is mainly on the tradeoff between science and politics in the Antarctic, and it is suggested that research there has a symbolic instrumental function, as distinct from a practical instrumental function in the Arctic. -Authors
CITATION STYLE
Elzinga, A., & Bohlin, I. (1989). The politics of science in polar regions. Ambio, 18(1), 71–76. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-585-28849-9_2
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