

Meanwhile, the Arctic is even more vulnerable to the effects of the pandemic due to its insufficient public health infrastructure. The level of cooperation and coordination between actors at local, national, and global levels has become highly crucial and the effectiveness of the response mainly depends on good governance. COVID-19 has turned into a global health crisis which has been affecting almost every individual simultaneously. The world is currently facing a common challenge. Measures Taken by the Canadian Coast Guard to Respond to the Pandemic in the Canadian Arctic.Fly-in Fly-Out Workers in the Arctic: The Need for More Workforce Transparency in the Arctic.Geography of Economic Recovery Strategies in Nordic Countries.Russia’s COVID Blinders: Arctic Policy Changes or Lack Thereof.Rethinking Governance in Time of Pandemics in the Arctic.COVID-19: How the Virus has frozen Arctic Research.Isolation and Resilience of Arctic Oil Exploration during COVID-19: Business as usual or Structural Shift?.COVID-19’s Impact on the Administration of Justice in Canada’s Arctic.Brazilians in the Arctic: A Global Experience with Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Vulnerable Communities: How has the COVID-19 Pandemic affected Indigenous People in the Russian Arctic?.COVID-19 and Arctic Search and Rescue, our Duty to Act.
#Journal intime series#

With the onset of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the world has found itself in a global health emergency, which has caused a dramatic loss of human life worldwide and brought normal life around the world to a halt for the better part of a year. Fishermen at the Port of Ilulissat, Greenland, January 2020.
