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mandag 21. mars 2022

Science and politics. Some aspects of Norwegian polar research in the 1900s

By Einar-Arne Drivenes

Professor in history at the University of  Tromsø, Norway

Editor of: Into the Ice. The History of Norway and the Polar Regions

Polar record, 2013-07, Vol.49 (3), p.316-319




 There has always a been a close connection between science and politics in the polar regions.[i] This pertains not only to the research sponsored by individual nation-states, but also to international research cooperation in this area. With regard to Norway, these two main lines can be illustrated by the reception Nansen and  his men received after the Fram expedition, when they returned home in 1896.

            King Oscar sought to internationalise the expedition. According to a report by Dagbladet, during a dinner party in the castle a few days prior to the national celebration in the public square by Akershus Festning, the King concluded his speech by emphasising that Nansen’s polar journey belonged to “the entire world and humanity in general, that is, not exclusively to any one country. Leiv Ericson, Vasco da Gama, Columbus, Cook, Peary, Stanley, Nordenskiöld, and now, Fridtjof Nansen, are victorious bearers of a cultural work that is of significance to the entire World.”

            However, at the national celebration for Nansen in the square by Akershus Festning, the well known author  Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson did everything he could to nationalise the Fram expedition. In his speech, which was cited in its entirety in Dagbladet, he turned the Fram expedition into a symbol of Norway. [ii] The characteristics this expedition represented were national characteristics, and the practical and theoretical knowledge that had made the expedition possible came from Norway.  His objective was, as Nansen, basically to make the Fram expedition Norwegian.

            The expedition had an educational effect on Norwegian youth about the values of self-control, endurance and the courage to set high goals. In this way, according to speaker, “Fram” was a rallying point for the nation and an inspiration to maintain good Norwegian virtues.  Yet the expedition was also the result of Norwegian traits. Knowledge, loyalty and self-control were developed through the quiet efforts of the Norwegian people, and suddenly they all emerged through one great feat.  Nansen’s meticulous planning was an expression of a particular conscientiousness that again was the result of the work of generations upon generations: “a people’s finest and most noble heirloom.” Bjørnson found Nansen’s courage in the Norwegian people.  With regard to loyalty, it was said: “you can easily go into the houses out by the skerries or up under the mountains, and you will find the same thing everywhere”. [iii]

            During the interwar period, there is no hiding the fact that this national rhetoric was used by nationalist activists. In the 1930s, segments of Norwegian polar research were accompanied by an undercurrent of imperialism in the Arctic Ocean, where the goal was “a greater Norway”. This pertained especially to the research that Norway’s Svalbard and Arctic Sea Studies (NSIU) sponsored. The leader and founder of the institution, the geologist Adolf Hoel, was ardently engaged, if not an activist, in Norwegian interests in the polar regions. During the Spitsbergen (Svalbard) case he emphasized the connections between Norwegian political interests and scientific expeditions in the Arctic. The expeditions was a part of the Norwegianisation of Spitsbergen according to Hoel. [iv] He did not devote a great deal of time and ink to explaining to politician the purely scientific benefits that this work could yield. 

            Yet this is not the entire story. During the glory days of Norwegian polar research, which includes the entire period from 1880 until 1940, important areas within polar research were internationally-oriented and focused on cooperation over national borders. This pertains especially to the theoretical research disciplines within geophysics, like northern lights research, oceanography, meteorology and fishery research.

It might perhaps be believed that the more interest-based and applied research that focused on mapping the natural resources in the Arctic, which was run by the NSIU during the period before 1945, was more politicised than theoretical polar research. However, the postwar period reveals that this distinction is not valid.

            In the first years after the war, the reorganisation of NSIU was key. The institution was stigmatised by the fact that the leader, Adolf Hoel, had been a member of the NS (the Norwegian Nazi Party) since 1933. During the war, he was the headmaster at the University of Oslo, appointed by the Quisling government. The purpose of reorganising NSIU was to bolster both the scope and quality of research at the institutions. And there was nothing lacking in their ambitions:  the institute was to become a “central institute” for Europe, and hold a leadership position in European polar research. The internationally recognised oceanographer and polar researcher, Harald Ulrik Sverdrup, was called home from the well-known Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California to lead the institution. The reorganisation of the institution was carried out in 1948, and it new name became the Norwegian Polar Institute.

            This process had both domestic and foreign aspects, with Norwegian political interests in the Arctic and Antarctica being the most important ones. In this way, not much was new in relation to the interwar period. This is not a remarkable fact. The institution was not merely a research institution, but also a state administrative organ for the polar areas. Neither the NSIU nor the Norwegian Polar Institute is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry that has been responsible for research in this country. The institution was first accountable to the Ministry of Commerce, then to the Ministry of Industry for a while, and then, since 1979, the Ministry of Environment.

            Nevertheless, what is most interesting is that Norwegian polar research during the postwar period was greatly influenced by superpower politics and the Cold War. This had to do with both the theoretical polar research linked to purely research institutions like universities, and the research sponsored by the Norwegian Polar Institute. In the book:  Into the Ice, The History of Norway and the Polar Regions, the professor of the History of Science, Robert Marc Friedman, conducted an interesting analysis of how superpower politics influenced Norwegian polar research during the initial years after the war. [v]

Friedman calls attention to an initiative introduced by Swedish glaciologist Hans Ahlmann for the Norwegian authorities to vitalise and reorganise Norwegian polar research after the war.  Ahlmann’s interest was particularly an expression of his concern about the Soviet Union’s efforts to intensify their research in the Arctic. He was afraid that the West was going to fall behind. In Norway, this concern was shared by leading politicians, especially after the Soviet Union expressed a desire to change the Svalbard Treaty towards the end of the war. 

            At the same time, Ahlmann eventually became convinced that, for both economic and scientific reasons, polar research had to be organised through cooperation with several countries. Thus, he was a keen advocate for getting an international authority, like Sverdrup, to take on the leadership of the Norwegian Polar Institute. The most important task Sverdrup received when he took over as director was then to organise and secure money for an international expedition to Antarctica, the Norwegian-British-Swedish expedition (NBS or the Maudheim expedition). Part of the expedition’s scientific purpose was, among other things, to test Ahlmann’s theories about global warming.

            Yet the expedition did not just have idealistic scientific objectives. It was also important for demonstrating British and Norwegian claims of sovereignty after the United States had heavily invested in research in Antarctica and at the same time proposed to internationalise the area.  The heavy investment by the United States was the direct result of a growing fear of Soviet expansion in the Arctic. Antarctica was a perfect place to get more information about how men and equipments could manage in polar areas.

However, the influence superpower politics had on Norwegian priorities during preparations for The International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1957 was even greater. Friedman demonstrates how the polar scientific community in Norway, including the Norwegian Polar Institute, initially believed that the country’s limited research funds with regard to participation in IGY could not be used for an expensive expedition to the Antarctic, but had to be concentrated in the Arctic. After the Soviet Union surprisingly had shown interest in participating in IGY, and there was uncertainty linked to Soviet involvement in Antarctica, the American Embassy in Norway directly contacted the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. After a great deal of back and forth, the result of the American pressure was a Norwegian expedition to Antarctica (the Norway Station expedition).

The period of the 1960s well into the 70s became a period of  lull for the Norwegian Polar Institute, even though the renowned director from 1960, the geologist Tore Gjelsvik, managed to accomplish a certain expansion of the staff and grants. He also used foreign policy arguments, but this did not seem to have much support on Svalbard. On the contrary, it seems that Norwegian authorities were very careful with research installations that might seem provocative to the Russians. This particularly pertained to research that was financed by American funds, or could indirectly have military relevance, like, for example, space research. On the other hand, Gjelsvik seemed to have greater success with acquiring funds that had direct economic relevance.

From the middle of the 1970s, Norwegian politics in Svalbard entered into a new and more active phase. The most visible sign of the new politics was the construction of an  airport, which led to a communication revolution for the Svalbard community. This also had great significance for the Norwegian Polar Institute, and for polar research in general. Up until this point, all of the research in this area had been completely dominated by the Polar Institute, even with regard to logistical services for external researchers. Now the researchers and research community could themselves get to Svalbard more easily. This especially pertained to the newly established University of Tromsø, which must be viewed as an important part of the increased  investment in polar research after 1970. In 2006 the University of Tromsø was the leading university in Norway with regard to the use of  research funds for polar research [vi] and  in 2009 the University of Tromsø was  the largest contributor  in Norway [vii] of scientific publications about "The High North". [viii]

In 1979, the Polar Institute was transferred from the Ministry of Industry to the Ministry of Environment, something that also signified both a symbolic and real shift from economic to environmental research. While the institution initially concentrated on geosciences and glaciology, with the mapping of resources as its primary focus, a shift had occurred toward environmental research in general, and biology in particular. The research profile changed focus then from the use and exploitation of polar resources to environmental conservation. At the same time, the Polar Institute provided new positions of employment. In 1960, the institute had 22 permanent positions, in 1975, it had 34, in 1993, following the move to Tromsø, it had 63, and, in 2010, 159 people worked there, of which 49 were contract employees.

While the new period for the institute with regard to its research profile happened at the end of the 1970s, its move to Tromsø in 1993 was still the most fundamental change in the institute’s history after 1948.  At about the same time, the polar research and education that the four mainland universities of that period had conducted with a base in Svalbard became institutionalised in the cooperative project UNIS (University studies in Svalbard). With the relocation of the Polar Institute, the Ministry of Environment emphasised that the institute’s primary task should still be management-oriented research. Investment in research increased after the move was completed in 1998, and this also pertained to theoretical research.  In addition, the environmental profile was strengthened through the prioritisation of three main areas: polar climate, environmental toxins, and biodiversity.

In this way, the 1990s introduced a pronounced increase of Norwegian polar research with a great deal of political support. The motives for this increased investment are explicitly stated in the White Paper about Norwegian polar research from 1993 [ix], where the move of the Polar Institute was also introduced. The report is thoroughly explicit with regard to both the goals of and justifications for the government’s increased investment. The increase was necessary in order to strengthen Norway’s position as an arctic nation in a time in which several large nations showed increased interest in the polar regions. It is pointed out that polar research is an important means for protecting national interests linked to sovereignty and jurisdiction, resource-related questions and environmental conservation.

According to the White Paper, polar research was a precondition for achieving several political objectives. Yet this vigorous effort was also necessary in relation to the theoretical research. The politics of national interest clearly emerge in the White Paper. In this report, it is strongly emphasised that Norway must actively participate in international research cooperation, not only to retain its role as a polar nation, but also because this research is quite demanding on resources and expenses. One condition for active Norwegian participation in this type of research cooperation across national borders was that Norwegian polar research be of high international quality. During the Cold War, this research cooperation took place within the two power blocs. One exception from this is The Antarctic Treaty from 1961, in which the signing powers, including the Soviet Union, together accept responsibility for the management of the area.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, new possibilities for cooperation opened up. One of the important factors behind the relocation of the Polar Institute to Tromsø, and the establishment of university studies on Svalbard, was the establishment of the Barents Region in 1993, following an initiative by the Foreign Minister at the time, Thorvald Stoltenberg. It then became necessary to establish several national research institutions within the region. Thus, it is no accident that a scholar within Norwegian Polar History has used the heading, “Et polart felleskap” (A polar community), to refer to the postwar period, indeed with a question mark following.

The next time distinction in Norwegian polar research can be located in 2006, when the new government introduced its strategy on the northern region. [x] Here, the production of knowledge and research, including polar research, is also a key element. It is “the hub” itself, as it is called, of the entire investment into the northern region. This was characterised in the following way in the government’s strategy on the northern region:  “As a part of knowledge development, we are going to further develop foreign policy to have a greater capacity to raise Norwegian interests in the northern region.” Here, national interests clearly emerge in the way they did in the White Paper on Norwegian polar research in 1993.

What research profile has the investment in the northern region resulted in? The statistics that are available from the Norwegian Institute for Studies in Innovation, Research and Education, show that the natural sciences and technological sciences in 2009 [xi] constituted three-quarters of the research in the northern region, while social sciences and humanities constituted about one-tenth, measured in number of man-hours.  The overview provided by the Research Council of Norway from the same year shows that oil-related research alone constituted 28 percent of the funds the Research Council granted to research in the northern region in 2009.

Even though it is too early to say, there is every reason to question whether investment in the northern territory has resulted in a research profile that points to a return to more economically-oriented research in the northern region, including polar research. There is less doubt that Norwegian activity and research even today is controlled by national interests.

 There are many similarities between today’s policies on the northern region and the political ambitions Adolf Hoel had on behalf of Norway during the period of  imperialism in the Arctic Ocean before the last World War. Attempts to norwegianise the polar regions in the north through scientific activity are not at all sensational or particularly Norwegian. This was a part of a long tradition throughout the West. History tells us that scientific was a main pillar of western cultural conquest  from pole to pole. 

In the postwar period, these interest-based policies have to a much greater degree been balanced with the recognition that the polar regions had to be managed within international legal regimes and through international research cooperation.

 

 

 

Literature:

 

Arlov, Thor Bjørn: Svalbards historie. Tapir akademisk forlag. 2003.

Barr, Susan: Norway – a Consistent  Polar  Nation. Analysis of an image seen through the history of the Norwegian Polar Institute. Oslo 2003.

Bones, Stian: Norway and past International Polar Years – a historical  account. In “Polar Research” 26  2007 , Norwegian Polar Institute.

Drivenes, Einar-Arne, Harald Dag Jølle:  Into the Ice-The History of Norway and the Polar Regions. Oslo Gyldendal,  2006. 

http://issuu.com/polarhistorie/docs/intotheice_del1?mode=window&backgroundColor=%23222222

http://issuu.com/polarhistorie/docs/intotheice_del2?mode=window&backgroundColor=%23222222

 (This is a 1 volume version of the three-volume "Norwegian polar history" published by Gyldendal norsk forlag. Oslo 2004).

Drivenes, Einar-Arne: “…Så langt livet rakk, for Norges ære…” i P2 Akademiet XXVIII. Oslo 2002. (Drivenes, Einar-Arne: "... So far  his life had time,  for Norway's honor ..." in P2 Academy XXVIII. Oslo 2002).

Drivenes, Einar-Arne: Ishavsimperialisme. Kap 3 i Norsk Polarhistorie bd. 2. Oslo 2004. (Drivenes, Einar-Arne: Imperialisme in polar regions. Chapter 3 of the Norwegian Polar History vol 2 Oslo 2004).

Friedman, Robert: Playing with the big boys. Chapter VI in Into the Ice-The History of Norway and the Polar RegionsOslo Gyldendal,  2006

Friedman, Robert: Å spise kirsebær med de store. Kap 5 i Norsk Polarhistorie bd. 2. Oslo 2004. (Friedman, Robert: Playing with  the big boys.  Chapter 5 of the Norwegian Polar History vol 2 Oslo 2004).

Hessen, Dag O.: Klodens helse sett fra polene. Kap. 6 i Norsk Polarhistorie bd. 2. Oslo 2004. (Hessen, Dag O.: The world health as seen from the poles. Chap. 6 of the Norwegian Polar History vol 2 Oslo 2004)

Dagbladet 10/9 1896.

 

St.meld. nr. 42, 1993. Norsk polarforskning (Norwegian polar research).

Regjeringens nordområdestrategi. Utenriksdepartementet  2006. (Government's strategy. Ministry of  Foreign Affairs 2006).  http://www.regjeringen.no/upload/kilde/ud/pla/2006/0006/ddd/pdfv/302927-nstrategi06.pdf

Nordområdeforskningen  2009. Kartlegging av ressursinnsats, resultater og merverdi. NIFU-STEP: Rapport 31/2010.   (High North Research, 2009. Mapping of  resource allocation, performance and value. NIFU-STEP: Report 31/2010).

Forskningsrådet. Norsk polarforskning. Forskningsrådet  policy for 2010-2013. (Research Council. Norwegian polar research. Research Policy for 2010-2013)

 



[i] By polar research, I am referring to the research that takes place in the polar regions, or where the polar regions have had vital importance for research. The polar regions are defined here as the Arctic and Antarctica.  The Arctic includes areas where the average temperature in July is 10 degrees Celsius or lower, which means that nearly all of the mainland of Norway falls outside of this. Antarctica constitutes the area south of the Antarctic convergence , where warm ocean currents from lower latitudes meet cold polar waters, somewhere between 53 degrees and 62 degrees south latitude. 

 

[ii]  Dagbladet 10/9 1896.

[iii]  Dagbladet 10/9 1896.

[iv] Drivenes, Jølle 2006: 287

[v]  Friedman  2006: 319-361

[vi] Forskningsrådet. Norsk polarforskning. Forskningsrådet policy for 2010-2013. Oslo 2009.  (s. 37) . (Research Council. Norwegian polar  research. Research Policy for 2010-2013. Oslo 2009. (p. 37)

[vii] Nordområdeforskningen 2009. Kartlegging av ressursinnsats, resultater og merverdi. NIFU-STEP: Rapport 31/2010  (s. 38).  (High North Research, 2009. Mapping of  resource allocation, performance and value. NIFU-STEP: Report 31/2010. p. 38).

[viii]   "The High North" in this context includes the circumpolar Arctic and the Barents Region. The circumpolar Arctic is defined as all land and sea territory north  of the Arctic Circle.

[ix]  St.meld. nr. 42, 1993. Norsk polarforskning (Norwegian polar research)

 

[x]  Regjeringens nordområdestrategi. Utenriksdepartementet  2006. (Government's strategy. Ministry of  Foreign Affairs 2006).  http://www.regjeringen.no/upload/kilde/ud/pla/2006/0006/ddd/pdfv/302927-nstrategi06.pdf

[xi]  Nordområdeforskningen  2009. Kartlegging av ressursinnsats, resultater og merverdi. NIFU-STEP: Rapport 31/2010.   (High North Research, 2009. Mapping of  resource allocation, performance and value. NIFU-STEP: Report 31/2010)

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