
Choice Made Simple!
Too many options?Click below to purchase an online gift card that can be used at participating retailers in Village Green Shopping Centre and continue your shopping IN CENTRE!Purchase HereHome
The Ice Does Not Bend: Geography, Sovereignty, and the Limits of Power in the Arctic
Coles
Loading Inventory...
The Ice Does Not Bend: Geography, Sovereignty, and the Limits of Power in the Arctic in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $0.99

Coles
The Ice Does Not Bend: Geography, Sovereignty, and the Limits of Power in the Arctic in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $0.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
The Arctic is changing. Ice recedes. Sea routes open. Global attention grows. Yet beneath these shifts lies something far more powerful and far more enduring: structure.
In The Ice Does Not Bend, Christopher O. Uba delivers a compelling exploration of how geography shapes governance, authority, and long-term decision-making in one of the world’s most demanding environments. At the centre of this study is Greenland — a vast Arctic territory whose location, legal status, and evolving self-government arrangements offer a revealing lens into the relationship between landscape and power.
This is not a book about fleeting events. It is about patterns that return, constraints that persist, and institutions that adapt to physical reality. Through historical insight and institutional analysis, Uba demonstrates how climate, distance, resources, and law combine to define what is possible — and what is not.
Organised in three movements — Structure, Friction, and Endurance — the book examines:
· How geography establishes the boundaries of action
· How governance evolves in remote and environmentally demanding regions
· How legal frameworks create stability amid change
· Why institutional continuity outlasts momentary attention
· What the Arctic reveals about resilience in a warming world
Clear, disciplined, and thought-provoking, The Ice Does Not Bend offers readers a deeper understanding of how natural environments shape human systems over time. It is ideal for those interested in geography, environmental governance, institutional development, and long-range strategic thinking.
In the High North, ambition meets reality. And reality, shaped by ice and distance, does not easily yield.
The ice does not bend — and neither do the structural forces that define our world.
The Arctic is changing. Ice recedes. Sea routes open. Global attention grows. Yet beneath these shifts lies something far more powerful and far more enduring: structure.
In The Ice Does Not Bend, Christopher O. Uba delivers a compelling exploration of how geography shapes governance, authority, and long-term decision-making in one of the world’s most demanding environments. At the centre of this study is Greenland — a vast Arctic territory whose location, legal status, and evolving self-government arrangements offer a revealing lens into the relationship between landscape and power.
This is not a book about fleeting events. It is about patterns that return, constraints that persist, and institutions that adapt to physical reality. Through historical insight and institutional analysis, Uba demonstrates how climate, distance, resources, and law combine to define what is possible — and what is not.
Organised in three movements — Structure, Friction, and Endurance — the book examines:
· How geography establishes the boundaries of action
· How governance evolves in remote and environmentally demanding regions
· How legal frameworks create stability amid change
· Why institutional continuity outlasts momentary attention
· What the Arctic reveals about resilience in a warming world
Clear, disciplined, and thought-provoking, The Ice Does Not Bend offers readers a deeper understanding of how natural environments shape human systems over time. It is ideal for those interested in geography, environmental governance, institutional development, and long-range strategic thinking.
In the High North, ambition meets reality. And reality, shaped by ice and distance, does not easily yield.
The ice does not bend — and neither do the structural forces that define our world.


















