International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic. / Ruck, Kate; Arndal, Marie Frost; Biebow, Nicole; Dahl, Justiina; Flått, Stig; Granskog, Mats; Holste, Svenja; Lenz, Josefine; Mercer, Jennifer; Pausch, Franziska; Perttu, Anna Maria; Rasch, Morten; Samuelsson, Maria; Sundfjord, Arild; Thomas, Femi Anna; Topp-Jorgensen, Elmer; Willmott, Veronica.

I: Polar Record, Bind 58, Nr. e30, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ruck, K, Arndal, MF, Biebow, N, Dahl, J, Flått, S, Granskog, M, Holste, S, Lenz, J, Mercer, J, Pausch, F, Perttu, AM, Rasch, M, Samuelsson, M, Sundfjord, A, Thomas, FA, Topp-Jorgensen, E & Willmott, V 2022, 'International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic', Polar Record, bind 58, nr. e30. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247422000249

APA

Ruck, K., Arndal, M. F., Biebow, N., Dahl, J., Flått, S., Granskog, M., Holste, S., Lenz, J., Mercer, J., Pausch, F., Perttu, A. M., Rasch, M., Samuelsson, M., Sundfjord, A., Thomas, F. A., Topp-Jorgensen, E., & Willmott, V. (2022). International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic. Polar Record, 58(e30). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247422000249

Vancouver

Ruck K, Arndal MF, Biebow N, Dahl J, Flått S, Granskog M o.a. International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic. Polar Record. 2022;58(e30). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247422000249

Author

Ruck, Kate ; Arndal, Marie Frost ; Biebow, Nicole ; Dahl, Justiina ; Flått, Stig ; Granskog, Mats ; Holste, Svenja ; Lenz, Josefine ; Mercer, Jennifer ; Pausch, Franziska ; Perttu, Anna Maria ; Rasch, Morten ; Samuelsson, Maria ; Sundfjord, Arild ; Thomas, Femi Anna ; Topp-Jorgensen, Elmer ; Willmott, Veronica. / International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic. I: Polar Record. 2022 ; Bind 58, Nr. e30.

Bibtex

@article{3ad6c8f9ae504b9ca240e40f92fffad8,
title = "International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic",
abstract = "Reliable access to Arctic research infrastructure is critical to the future of polar science. In cultivating proposals, it is essential that researchers have a deep understanding of existing platforms when selecting the appropriate research site and experimental design for projects. However, Arctic infrastructure platforms are often funded as national assets, and choices for what would be the best platform for the project are sometimes at odds with a researcher's ability to gain access. Researchers from Arctic and non-Arctic nations are poised to benefit from reducing barriers and increasing cooperation around transnational access to Arctic infrastructure, allowing scientists to successfully execute the research that is most needed rather than what is just logistically feasible. This commentary provides a summary of findings from a workshop held at the 2021 Arctic Science Summit Week to discuss navigating transnational or cross-border access to national research infrastructure. This workshop brought together users and operators of Arctic infrastructure platforms with the three goals of identifying challenges, best practices, and possible next steps for improved collaboration. ",
keywords = "Arctic, Infrastructure, International, Logistics, Transnational Access",
author = "Kate Ruck and Arndal, {Marie Frost} and Nicole Biebow and Justiina Dahl and Stig Fl{\aa}tt and Mats Granskog and Svenja Holste and Josefine Lenz and Jennifer Mercer and Franziska Pausch and Perttu, {Anna Maria} and Morten Rasch and Maria Samuelsson and Arild Sundfjord and Thomas, {Femi Anna} and Elmer Topp-Jorgensen and Veronica Willmott",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1017/S0032247422000249",
language = "English",
volume = "58",
journal = "Polar Record",
issn = "0032-2474",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "e30",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - International access to research infrastructure in the Arctic

AU - Ruck, Kate

AU - Arndal, Marie Frost

AU - Biebow, Nicole

AU - Dahl, Justiina

AU - Flått, Stig

AU - Granskog, Mats

AU - Holste, Svenja

AU - Lenz, Josefine

AU - Mercer, Jennifer

AU - Pausch, Franziska

AU - Perttu, Anna Maria

AU - Rasch, Morten

AU - Samuelsson, Maria

AU - Sundfjord, Arild

AU - Thomas, Femi Anna

AU - Topp-Jorgensen, Elmer

AU - Willmott, Veronica

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Reliable access to Arctic research infrastructure is critical to the future of polar science. In cultivating proposals, it is essential that researchers have a deep understanding of existing platforms when selecting the appropriate research site and experimental design for projects. However, Arctic infrastructure platforms are often funded as national assets, and choices for what would be the best platform for the project are sometimes at odds with a researcher's ability to gain access. Researchers from Arctic and non-Arctic nations are poised to benefit from reducing barriers and increasing cooperation around transnational access to Arctic infrastructure, allowing scientists to successfully execute the research that is most needed rather than what is just logistically feasible. This commentary provides a summary of findings from a workshop held at the 2021 Arctic Science Summit Week to discuss navigating transnational or cross-border access to national research infrastructure. This workshop brought together users and operators of Arctic infrastructure platforms with the three goals of identifying challenges, best practices, and possible next steps for improved collaboration.

AB - Reliable access to Arctic research infrastructure is critical to the future of polar science. In cultivating proposals, it is essential that researchers have a deep understanding of existing platforms when selecting the appropriate research site and experimental design for projects. However, Arctic infrastructure platforms are often funded as national assets, and choices for what would be the best platform for the project are sometimes at odds with a researcher's ability to gain access. Researchers from Arctic and non-Arctic nations are poised to benefit from reducing barriers and increasing cooperation around transnational access to Arctic infrastructure, allowing scientists to successfully execute the research that is most needed rather than what is just logistically feasible. This commentary provides a summary of findings from a workshop held at the 2021 Arctic Science Summit Week to discuss navigating transnational or cross-border access to national research infrastructure. This workshop brought together users and operators of Arctic infrastructure platforms with the three goals of identifying challenges, best practices, and possible next steps for improved collaboration.

KW - Arctic

KW - Infrastructure

KW - International

KW - Logistics

KW - Transnational Access

U2 - 10.1017/S0032247422000249

DO - 10.1017/S0032247422000249

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85139391807

VL - 58

JO - Polar Record

JF - Polar Record

SN - 0032-2474

IS - e30

ER -

ID: 344640419