Chapter 1: Introduction: The Circumpolar Dimensions of the Governance of the Far North - Ken Coates and Carin Holroyd, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter 2: Indigenous Peoples of the Arctic: Re-taking Control of the Arctic - Ken Coates, University of Saskatchewan and Else Grete Broderstad, University of Tromso.- Chapter 3: Indigenous Internationalism in the Arctic- Gary N. Wilson, University of Northern British Columbia.- Chapter 4: Demographic Change in the Arctic - Timothy Heleniak, Nordregio and Eeva Turunen and Shinan Wang.- Chapter 5: State Expansion and Indigenous Response in the Arctic - A Globally-Integrated Northern Borderland Emerges from the Historical Synthesis of Northern Frontier and Northern Homeland - Barry Zellen, University of Connecticut.- Chapter 6: The Economy of the Arctic - Andrey N. Petrov, University of Northern Iowa and Joan Nymand Larsen, University of Akureyri, Iceland.- Chapter 7: Extractive Energy and Arctic Communities TBD.- Chapter 8: Innovation, New Technologies and the Future of the Circumpolar North - Joelena Leader, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter 9: Arctic Advanced Education and Research - Ken Coates.- Chapter 10: Circumpolar Business Development - the Paradox of Governance?- Frode Mellemvik, High North Center, Nord University and Elena Dyptsyna and Andrei Mineev.- Chapter Eleven: Multinational Corporations in the Arctic : From Colonial-era Chartered Companies to Contemporary Co-Management and Collaborative Governance by Barry Zellen, University of Connecticut.- Chapter Twelve: The Future of Work, Ken Coates, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter 13: Russia's Arctic Regions and Policies, George Soroka, Harvard University.- Chapter Fourteen: Government, Policies and Priorities in Kalaalit Nunaat (Greenland): Roads to Independence- Adam Grydehøj, Director, South China University of Technology.- Chapter 15: Arctic Policy of the United States: An historical survey - Steven Haycox, University of Alaska.- Chapter 16: Iceland as an Arctic State - Valur Ingimundarson, Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Iceland. Chapter 17: Svalbard: Between International Community and International Relations Space - - Adam Grydehøj, South China University of Technology, and Ping Su, South China University of Technology.- Chapter 18: Europe's North: the Arctic Policies of Sweden, Norway and Finland - Ken Coates and Carin Holroyd, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter Nineteen: The Arctic in International Affairs - Heather Exner-Pirot, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter 20: East Asia (Japan, South Korea and China) and the Arctic - Carin Holroyd, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter Twenty-One: The History of USA-Russia Relations in the Bering Strait - Rebecca Pincus, Wilson Center.- Chapter 22: Canada and Russia in an Evolving Circumpolar Arctic - Ron R. Wallace, Canadian Global Affairs Institute.- Chapter 23: The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Arctic Ocean - Nigel Bankes and Maria das Neves, University of Calgary.- Chapter 24: Arctic Policy Developments and Maritime Transportation - Lawson Brigham, University of Alaska Fairbanks.-Chapter 25: The Emergence of a New Ocean - how to react to massive change? - Timo Koivurova, Pirjo Kleemola Jutunen and Stefan Kirscher, University of Lapland.- Chapter 26: International Law and the Arctic - Dwight Newman, University of Saskatchewan.- Chapter 27: The Future of the Arctic Council - Matthew Wiseman, U of Toronto.- Chapter 28: The Evolving North American Security Context TBD.- Chapter 29: The Arctic and Geopolitics- David Welch, University of Waterloo.- Chapter 30: The Militarization of the Arctic to the 1990, Whitney Lackenbauer and Peter Kikkert - Whitney.- Chapter 31: Arctic Climate Change: Local Impacts, Global Consequences and Policy Implications by Warwick F. Vincent.- Chapter 32: The Future of the Arctic - Ken Coates and Carin Holroyd, University of Saskatchewan.