Year: 2018 Language: english Author: Niels Vestergaard Genre: Handbook Publisher: Springer Format: PDF Quality: eBook Pages count: 242 Description: The rates of climate and environmental change in the Arctic region greatly exceed global averages and are accelerating in response to biophysical feedbacks connected with human economic activities. How can societies address the complexities of resource development in the Arctic and also create more effective governance systems that promote social justice and the rights of indigenous peoples? This important volume, the outcome of a conference on Arctic Marine Resource Governance in Reykjavik, Iceland, in October 2015, addresses opportunities for implementation of creative resource management systems and new institutional arrangements and technology for sustainable development. As sea ice declines, the emerging frontier of a new Arctic Ocean presents serious challenges to existing governance models, international regimes, and agreements. The editors have assembled a diverse group of leading scholars who use disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches to focus on issues in the broad and overlapping categories of Arctic governance, fisheries, and technology and development. Reaching across important issues of energy resource extraction economics and the infrastructure demands for shipping, the authors provide a much-needed dialogue on fisheries regulation, management, and protection of the Arctic marine environment. They critique the use of a trans-boundary governance capacity framework to evaluate key relationships among the Arctic states and more recent actors such as China. A discussion of the rise of Asian state interests in the Arctic; the complex histories of political interactions between the USA, Canada, and Russia; and the distinct interests of indigenous peoples’ organizations of the Arctic is a critical bridge linking the individual chapters. The authors are convincing in making a case that the Arctic Council must be flexible and adaptive across multiple scales and uses if it is to remain the key governance forum for the Arctic region.
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Arctic marine resource governance and development.pdf
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Arctic marine resource governance and development
Year: 2018
Language: english
Author: Niels Vestergaard
Genre: Handbook
Publisher: Springer
Format: PDF
Quality: eBook
Pages count: 242
Description: The rates of climate and environmental change in the Arctic region greatly exceed
global averages and are accelerating in response to biophysical feedbacks connected
with human economic activities. How can societies address the complexities of
resource development in the Arctic and also create more effective governance systems
that promote social justice and the rights of indigenous peoples? This important
volume, the outcome of a conference on Arctic Marine Resource Governance in
Reykjavik, Iceland, in October 2015, addresses opportunities for implementation
of creative resource management systems and new institutional arrangements and
technology for sustainable development.
As sea ice declines, the emerging frontier of a new Arctic Ocean presents serious
challenges to existing governance models, international regimes, and agreements.
The editors have assembled a diverse group of leading scholars who use disciplinary
and interdisciplinary approaches to focus on issues in the broad and overlapping
categories of Arctic governance, fisheries, and technology and development.
Reaching across important issues of energy resource extraction economics
and the infrastructure demands for shipping, the authors provide a much-needed
dialogue on fisheries regulation, management, and protection of the Arctic marine
environment.
They critique the use of a trans-boundary governance capacity framework to
evaluate key relationships among the Arctic states and more recent actors such as
China. A discussion of the rise of Asian state interests in the Arctic; the complex
histories of political interactions between the USA, Canada, and Russia; and the
distinct interests of indigenous peoples’ organizations of the Arctic is a critical
bridge linking the individual chapters. The authors are convincing in making a case
that the Arctic Council must be flexible and adaptive across multiple scales and uses
if it is to remain the key governance forum for the Arctic region.
Contents
Screenshots
Arctic marine resource governance and development.pdf
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