![]() Operation Phakisa's strong focus on maritime economic matters ignores two unresolved issues in respect of South Africa's maritime economy and maritime diplomacy, namely the country's extended continental shelf claim. Key Words: Arctic, climate change, ice, North Pole, sovereignty.ĭOI: 10.1080/19480881.2015.1066555 In 2014, the South African government announced Operation Phakisa in order to stimulate the country's blue economy. Through our study of these debates we engage the Arctic both as a region that is undergoing climate change’s most extreme impacts and as a laboratory for understanding how these and similar impacts might modify the spatial organization of political authority across the world. To investigate how climate change is challenging the territorial imaginaries around which notions of sovereignty historically have been based, we turn to three debates in the contemporary Arctic: the question of sovereignty in the Northwest Passage, conflicts over territorial control in the Arctic Ocean, and the potential for enhanced multilateral governance. As states expand their sovereignty claims northward in pursuit of potential opportunities (in many cases made possible by climate change), these same states are being confronted with the region’s increasing territorial indeterminacy (which also is exacerbated by climate change). ![]() Nowhere is this challenge more pressing than in the Arctic. Climate change is challenging the notions of permanency and stability on which the ideal of the sovereign, territorial state historically has rested. ![]()
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