KCIS 2022 - International Competition in the High North
Start Date
Tuesday October 11, 2022End Date
Thursday October 13, 2022Time
12:00 am - 12:00 amLocation
Holiday Inn - Kingston Waterfront | Kingston, ONTransformations underway in global politics are mirrored and concentrated in the Arctic.
For circumpolar countries, the security implications of international competition in the North are profound. KCIS 2022 proposes to explore these implications and how Canada, the United States and NATO allies can and should respond.
How will emerging great-power competition affect the security environment in the circumpolar region? What foreign and defence policy implications flow from the increased geopolitical/geostrategic instability in the Arctic? How will the changes in Arctic affect future defence and security operations?
Our four partner organizations; CIDP, SSI, NDC & CADTC are pleased to host KCIS 2022 on October 11–13 at the Holiday Inn—Kingston Waterfront in Kingston, On.
The conference will be available in both English and French via live translation.
Tuessday Oct 11, 2022:
1800 - 2130 : Conference Opening – Senior Staff Mess, Royal Military College
Welcome reception and Opening remarks
- Maj-Gen Roch Pelletier, Commander CADTC
- Stéfanie von Hlatky, Director CIDP
Wednesday Oct 12, 2022:
0700 - Registration and Breakfast
0815 - Welcome and Introductions
LTC Wendy Tokach, USAWC Visiting Defence Fellow
Welcome to Territory – Wendy Phillips, Elder in Residence - Queen’s University
0830 - Challenge to the Conference
0845 - Opening Keynote
Ms Jody Thomas - National Security and Intelligence Advisor
0930 - Panel 1 - International Security Challenges in the North
This opening panel will provide a broad scene-setting survey of the security environment of the contemporary circumpolar north. It will focus on the security threats posed by the recent shifts in great-power politics, the changes being wrought by climate change, the challenges facing indigenous communities, and the opportunities for economic development in the Arctic.
1100 - Break
1130 - Panel 2: Great Powers in the High North
This panel looks at how the re-emergence of great-power competition is affecting regional politics in all areas of the globe and highlights great-power interests in the North. It further examines the evolution of circumpolar security policies of the United States, the People’s Republic of China, the Russian Federation, and European powers.
1300 - Lunch
1400 - Keynote Address
1500 - Panel 3 - Diplomacy and International Cooperation
This panel will focus on the potential for international cooperation in the High North. It will offer perspectives from regional and international organizations and will feature examples of multinational cooperation in the Arctic.
1800 - Conference Dinner
1000 Islands Cruises (be at the dock for 1800, boat departs at 1830)
Thursday October 13:
0700 - Breakfast
0815 - Welcome and Announcements
Col Ryan Jurkowski, CAF Visiting Defence Fellow
0830 - Keynote Address
0930 - Panel 4 - Defence Capabilities in North America and the Arctic
The purpose of this panel would be to explore the modernization and evolution of NORAD and other North American defence capabilities in the circumpolar North.
1100 - Break
1130 - Panel 5 - Joint Security Cooperation
This panel will focus on civil-military cooperation and joint force involvement to offer a comprehensive view on inter-agency contributions to Arctic security.
1300 - Lunch
1400 Panel 6 - Strategies for the Future
The concluding panel will discuss strategies and policy recommendations for Western allies in the circumpolar North in the years ahead. Speakers will present implications from the perspective of Canada, the United States, and NATO’s European allies.
1530 - Closing Keynote
General Wayne Eyre, Chief of Defence Staff, Canadian Armed Forces
1615 - Closing Remarks
KCIS 2022 Co-organizers