Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2002, Page 44

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2002, Page 44
42 THE SIGNIFICANCE OF TRANSNATIONAL COOPERATION IN NORDIC ATLANTIC REGIONS lands in international negotiations i.e. on fish quotas. These unequal starting points for the re- gions/nations involved in West Nordic Co- operation explain why the Faroe Islands in particular have been isolated and margin- alised from regionalisation by external fac- tors. Although West Nordic and NORA co- operation has been a prime Faroese initia- tive, it may be asked why the Faroe Islands do not have stronger regionalist policies. One reason could be that Faroese politics have been mostly oriented towards internal regional issues, because of a cultural orien- tation and a lack of public political debate, and the Home Rule Government’s strong commitment to maintain the way of life and social integration of Faroese villages (Bærenholdt, 1992; 1994b). The ongoing value of the “village world” as a term of reference - but no longer as an organisa- tional principle of society - has been the manifestation of an inadequate and under- developed political culture and lack of pub- lic involvement (Haldrup and Hoydal, 1994). This is one essential aspect of the full explanation but not sufficient in itself. The foreign policy pursued by the Faroe Islands and Greenland comes under the auspices of Danish government. Interna- tional initiatives by the two home rule gov- ernments have in fact been questioned by the Danish government, but Greenland in particular continues to challenge the for- eign policy monopoly of the Danish gov- ernment by establishing an offíce of inter- national relations and foreign policy in the home rule administration. However, the foreign policy interests of the Faroe Islands and Greenland have not been a subject of major interest to the Danish government, compared to the very strong interest shown in regional policies by the Norwegian For- eign Ministry’s BEAR initiative and its funding of projects. In fact, there has been no resistance towards the Faroes’ and Greenland’s status as non-EU members and the Danish government has not neglected to follow up on Faroese or Greenlandic inter- ests in the EU. In fact, with regard to par- ticipation and as parts of the Danish Realm, Greenland and Faroe Islands have effec- tively been ‘stowaways’ within Denmark’s membership of the EC/EU. Therefore, this leaves the Faroe Islands and Greenland without any possibility of pursuing au- tonomous monetary policies adapted to the needs of fisheries policy, whereas Iceland has been able to use devaluation to adjust the fisheries sector to the demands of the world market. In the long run, devaluation has been much cheaper than the heavy sub- sidies to the fisheries sector in the Faroe Is- lands and Greenland. The subsidies are payed by the Home Rule Governments, which on the other hand receive transfers from the Danish state budget. Therefore, incomplete political competences and cul- tures have effectively limited the capabili- ties of the Faroes’ and Greenland’s power to act effectively within regional initiatives. The Faroese crisis in the beginning of the 1990s raised several as yet unsettled ques- tions concerning the system apparent of home rule government. Constitutionally unclear delegations of power and responsi- bility by Denmark to the Faroes is one the problems that need to be resolved. The
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