Abstract

The Arctic is a remote region that has become increasingly globalized, yet it remains extremely vulnerable to many risks. The COVID-19 pandemic presented new challenges to the region. Using the search, appraisal, synthesis and analysis (SALSA) approach to conduct a meta-synthesis of the academic and grey literature on the impacts of the pandemic, an assessment is conducted of the types of risks that have been presented by the COVID-19 pandemic, the scales, and the national response strategies for mitigating the risks. Two case studies are explored: Iceland and Greenland, island nations that exemplify the extremes of the Arctic and reliance on tourism, a sector that was nearly entirely suspended by the pandemic. An evaluative matrix is employed which combines five different scales of risk—nano, micro, meso, macro and cosmic—with a sustainability categorization of impacts. The risks of the pandemic cut across the respective scale and categories, with the potential for macro-scale events (systemic risk) to unfold linked to economic spillover effects driven by the curtailment of tourism and various supply chain delays. Both Iceland and Greenland have exemplified risk mitigation strategies that prioritize health over wealth, very strictly in the case of the latter. Strict border controls and domestic restrictions have enabled Iceland and Greenland to have much lower case and death numbers than most nations. In addition, Iceland has led the way, globally, in terms of testing and accumulating scientific knowledge through genetic sequencing of the virus. The academic contribution of the paper concerns its broadening of understanding concerning systemic risk, which extends beyond financial implications to includes sustainability dimensions. For policymakers and practitioners, the paper highlights successful risk mitigation and science-based measures that will be useful for any nation tackling a future pandemic, regardless of whether they are island states, Arctic nations or another country.

Highlights

  • Arctic communities are often remote, resource dependent and based upon a mixture of monetary, mixed and non-monetary economies [1,2]

  • The paper highlights successful risk mitigation and science-based measures that will be useful for any nation tackling a future pandemic, regardless of whether they are island states, Arctic nations or another country

  • The World Economic Forum (2020) highlighted a series of economic risks of global concern due to COVID-19, including: prolonged recession; surge in bankruptcies; failure of whole sectors to recover; high levels of structural unemployment, especially among young people and women; tighter restrictions on cross-border flows of people; weakening fiscal positions of national economies; and protracted disruption of global supply chains [14]. These are all likely to be applicable to Arctic states; the incidence of risk in the Arctic is often of greater degree than the rest of the world due to special vulnerabilities linked to nature and resource reliance, remote locations with tightly woven communities and people-reliant economies [1,13,15]

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Summary

Introduction

Arctic communities are often remote, resource dependent and based upon a mixture of monetary, mixed and non-monetary economies [1,2]. The World Economic Forum (2020) highlighted a series of economic risks of global concern due to COVID-19, including: prolonged recession; surge in bankruptcies; failure of whole sectors to recover; high levels of structural unemployment, especially among young people and women; tighter restrictions on cross-border flows of people; weakening fiscal positions of national economies; and protracted disruption of global supply chains [14] These are all likely to be applicable to Arctic states; the incidence of risk in the Arctic is often of greater degree than the rest of the world due to special vulnerabilities linked to nature and resource reliance, remote locations with tightly woven communities and people-reliant economies [1,13,15]

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