© WWF
Working together for the Arctic
This issue of The Circle looks at the importance of cooperation in the Arctic to support conservation of wildlife on land and in the sea. It also examines how using art as well as elevating Inuit youth voices are important when it comes to protecting the Arctic and its habitats.
Stories from this issue
We must cooperate across borders to solve shared problems
News from the Arctic
Capturing the reality of climate change on film
Can cooperation on fishing in the Central Arctic Ocean thrive as geopolitical conflicts persist?
Working together to protect migration routes, breeding sites and overwintering areas
Lessons in cross-cultural communication about climate
Collaborative knowledge-gathering about migration can help us understand species’ adaptability
Protecting barren-ground caribou in Canada
Working together to elevate the voices of Inuit youth
Pursuing permanent protection for Alaska’s Bristol Bay
This critically endangered Nordic goose is making a recovery
Counting walrus from land, air and space
The back cover

© Kerry Koepping / Arctic Arts Project
After the Storm
This photo, titled After the Storm, was taken by Kerry Koepping, a US-based photographer and the executive director of the Arctic Arts Project, at the mouth of Kanjiafjiord, Illulissat, Greenland. Great icebergs like this one break from the glaciers that originate at the Greenland ice sheet. These glaciers are calving and melting at record levels, becoming water in the world’s oceans.
More stories
More from The Circle
The Arctic in the age of tech
The forgotten Arctic: A crisis of global inaction
Navigating a changing Arctic
Arctic clean-up: Turning the tide
About The Circle magazine
Quarterly
WWF Arctic Programme publishes the magazine four times per year and each issue zeroes in on a theme and presents a range of stories.
Actions
It covers the key climate risks are for the Arctic—and what researchers and decision-makers in the eight Arctic nations are doing.
Perspectives
We aim to hear from contributors in a selection of Arctic countries—from youth to Indigenous communities to policymakers to scientists.
Themes
Stay informed about the environmental and development issues affecting wildlife, ecosystems and people in the Arctic today.