The eight countries claiming Arctic territory—Russia, Canada, the United States, Denmark (Kalaallit Nunaat/Greenland), Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Iceland—have different systems of central administration and therefore administer their northlands in different ways. All of them, it may be noted, are technologically advanced states with a relatively high standard of living. But Iceland is the only one in which there is no distinction between a national centre and an Arctic periphery: it lies wholly within the Arctic as defined for this article and has no Indigenous northern people distinct from the majority. The other countries have had to devise a relationship with ...(100 of 37874 words)