© 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.

Read magazine   Download PDF

Stories from this issue

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

Explore stories from other issues of The Circle.

More from The Circle

Magazine cover of the Circle. A herd of caribou is running across the landscape, with their silhouettes clearly visible against the blue sky. Text: The Circle, magazine 4.2025. The Arctic wanderers: caribou in a changing north. Articles: Social memory AI meets local knowledge Can grazing giants help? Herds on the rebound. WWF Global Arctic Programme's logo is in the corner.

The Arctic wanderers: caribou in a changing north

The Arctic in the age of tech

The forgotten Arctic: A crisis of global inaction

Navigating a changing Arctic

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.