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This book argues for the utility of human rights in the practice of ocean governance.
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This book argues for the utility of human rights in the practice of ocean governance.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 564g
- ISBN-13: 9781032519593
- ISBN-10: 1032519592
- Artikelnr.: 69032463
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 564g
- ISBN-13: 9781032519593
- ISBN-10: 1032519592
- Artikelnr.: 69032463
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Mara Ntona is Lecturer in Human Rights and Environmental Law at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK.
Acknowledgments vii
1 Introduction 1
2 The Oceanic imaginary in Western culture, thought, and law: archetypes
and alternatives 15
1. Introduction 15
2. The ghosts of oceanic imaginaries past 17
2.1. The oceanic sublime, fear, and the allure of the unknown 17
2.1. The advent of the geo-coded ocean and the birth of the modern law of
the sea 19
2.2. Winds of 'progress', tide of resistance 22
3. Maritime territorialisation under the LOSC: old legacies, new
institutions 27
3.1. An introduction to coastal state jurisdiction 29
3.2. The blind spots of maritime sovereignty 35
4. Maritime territorialisation under MSP: a missed opportunity for
transformation? 39
4.1. The emergence and early evolution of MSP 41
4.2. The legal framework for MSP in the EU 43
4.3. The critical turn in MSP studies 47
5. The untapped potential of human rights 52
5.1. Horizons established 53
5.2. Horizons expanded 55
6. Conclusion 67
3 The ecosystem approach in marine planning and management: from
'productively ambiguous' to normatively productive 98
1. Introduction 98
2. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under EU law 99
2.1. The ecosystem approach as an exercise in scientific and
technological-managerial rationality 101
2.2. The ecosystem approach as a locus of scalar politics and struggles 114
2.2.1. Connecting the dots between ecological and geographic conceptions of
scale 116
2.2.2. The legal scaling of ecosystem-based marine planning and management
in the EU 125
3. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under international
biodiversity law 132
3.1. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for communitybased management 134
3.2. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for upholding and cultivating
relational values 141
4. Conclusion 145
4 The maritime dimension of EU territorial action: towards just blue
futures? 169
1. Introduction 169
2. The rise and maturation of EU territorial action 171
2.1. The birth of cohesion policy (1957-1989) 172
2.2. The emergence of European spatial planning (1989-1999) 175
2.3. Territorial cohesion (1999-present) 180
2.4. EU territorial action coming of age? The European Social Model and its
spatial and ecological dimensions 184
3. European imaginaries of maritime territorial vulnerability, equity, and
solidarity 189
3.1. Locating spatial justice 191
3.2. Territorial vulnerability as spatial peripherality and functional
marginality 196
3.3. Territorial vulnerability as ecological and cultural sensitivity 200
3.4. Prospects for the 'insurgent architects' of Europe's blue futures 207
4. Conclusion 214
5 Conclusion 238
Index 246
1 Introduction 1
2 The Oceanic imaginary in Western culture, thought, and law: archetypes
and alternatives 15
1. Introduction 15
2. The ghosts of oceanic imaginaries past 17
2.1. The oceanic sublime, fear, and the allure of the unknown 17
2.1. The advent of the geo-coded ocean and the birth of the modern law of
the sea 19
2.2. Winds of 'progress', tide of resistance 22
3. Maritime territorialisation under the LOSC: old legacies, new
institutions 27
3.1. An introduction to coastal state jurisdiction 29
3.2. The blind spots of maritime sovereignty 35
4. Maritime territorialisation under MSP: a missed opportunity for
transformation? 39
4.1. The emergence and early evolution of MSP 41
4.2. The legal framework for MSP in the EU 43
4.3. The critical turn in MSP studies 47
5. The untapped potential of human rights 52
5.1. Horizons established 53
5.2. Horizons expanded 55
6. Conclusion 67
3 The ecosystem approach in marine planning and management: from
'productively ambiguous' to normatively productive 98
1. Introduction 98
2. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under EU law 99
2.1. The ecosystem approach as an exercise in scientific and
technological-managerial rationality 101
2.2. The ecosystem approach as a locus of scalar politics and struggles 114
2.2.1. Connecting the dots between ecological and geographic conceptions of
scale 116
2.2.2. The legal scaling of ecosystem-based marine planning and management
in the EU 125
3. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under international
biodiversity law 132
3.1. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for communitybased management 134
3.2. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for upholding and cultivating
relational values 141
4. Conclusion 145
4 The maritime dimension of EU territorial action: towards just blue
futures? 169
1. Introduction 169
2. The rise and maturation of EU territorial action 171
2.1. The birth of cohesion policy (1957-1989) 172
2.2. The emergence of European spatial planning (1989-1999) 175
2.3. Territorial cohesion (1999-present) 180
2.4. EU territorial action coming of age? The European Social Model and its
spatial and ecological dimensions 184
3. European imaginaries of maritime territorial vulnerability, equity, and
solidarity 189
3.1. Locating spatial justice 191
3.2. Territorial vulnerability as spatial peripherality and functional
marginality 196
3.3. Territorial vulnerability as ecological and cultural sensitivity 200
3.4. Prospects for the 'insurgent architects' of Europe's blue futures 207
4. Conclusion 214
5 Conclusion 238
Index 246
Acknowledgments vii
1 Introduction 1
2 The Oceanic imaginary in Western culture, thought, and law: archetypes
and alternatives 15
1. Introduction 15
2. The ghosts of oceanic imaginaries past 17
2.1. The oceanic sublime, fear, and the allure of the unknown 17
2.1. The advent of the geo-coded ocean and the birth of the modern law of
the sea 19
2.2. Winds of 'progress', tide of resistance 22
3. Maritime territorialisation under the LOSC: old legacies, new
institutions 27
3.1. An introduction to coastal state jurisdiction 29
3.2. The blind spots of maritime sovereignty 35
4. Maritime territorialisation under MSP: a missed opportunity for
transformation? 39
4.1. The emergence and early evolution of MSP 41
4.2. The legal framework for MSP in the EU 43
4.3. The critical turn in MSP studies 47
5. The untapped potential of human rights 52
5.1. Horizons established 53
5.2. Horizons expanded 55
6. Conclusion 67
3 The ecosystem approach in marine planning and management: from
'productively ambiguous' to normatively productive 98
1. Introduction 98
2. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under EU law 99
2.1. The ecosystem approach as an exercise in scientific and
technological-managerial rationality 101
2.2. The ecosystem approach as a locus of scalar politics and struggles 114
2.2.1. Connecting the dots between ecological and geographic conceptions of
scale 116
2.2.2. The legal scaling of ecosystem-based marine planning and management
in the EU 125
3. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under international
biodiversity law 132
3.1. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for communitybased management 134
3.2. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for upholding and cultivating
relational values 141
4. Conclusion 145
4 The maritime dimension of EU territorial action: towards just blue
futures? 169
1. Introduction 169
2. The rise and maturation of EU territorial action 171
2.1. The birth of cohesion policy (1957-1989) 172
2.2. The emergence of European spatial planning (1989-1999) 175
2.3. Territorial cohesion (1999-present) 180
2.4. EU territorial action coming of age? The European Social Model and its
spatial and ecological dimensions 184
3. European imaginaries of maritime territorial vulnerability, equity, and
solidarity 189
3.1. Locating spatial justice 191
3.2. Territorial vulnerability as spatial peripherality and functional
marginality 196
3.3. Territorial vulnerability as ecological and cultural sensitivity 200
3.4. Prospects for the 'insurgent architects' of Europe's blue futures 207
4. Conclusion 214
5 Conclusion 238
Index 246
1 Introduction 1
2 The Oceanic imaginary in Western culture, thought, and law: archetypes
and alternatives 15
1. Introduction 15
2. The ghosts of oceanic imaginaries past 17
2.1. The oceanic sublime, fear, and the allure of the unknown 17
2.1. The advent of the geo-coded ocean and the birth of the modern law of
the sea 19
2.2. Winds of 'progress', tide of resistance 22
3. Maritime territorialisation under the LOSC: old legacies, new
institutions 27
3.1. An introduction to coastal state jurisdiction 29
3.2. The blind spots of maritime sovereignty 35
4. Maritime territorialisation under MSP: a missed opportunity for
transformation? 39
4.1. The emergence and early evolution of MSP 41
4.2. The legal framework for MSP in the EU 43
4.3. The critical turn in MSP studies 47
5. The untapped potential of human rights 52
5.1. Horizons established 53
5.2. Horizons expanded 55
6. Conclusion 67
3 The ecosystem approach in marine planning and management: from
'productively ambiguous' to normatively productive 98
1. Introduction 98
2. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under EU law 99
2.1. The ecosystem approach as an exercise in scientific and
technological-managerial rationality 101
2.2. The ecosystem approach as a locus of scalar politics and struggles 114
2.2.1. Connecting the dots between ecological and geographic conceptions of
scale 116
2.2.2. The legal scaling of ecosystem-based marine planning and management
in the EU 125
3. Ecosystem-based marine planning and management under international
biodiversity law 132
3.1. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for communitybased management 134
3.2. The ecosystem approach as a vehicle for upholding and cultivating
relational values 141
4. Conclusion 145
4 The maritime dimension of EU territorial action: towards just blue
futures? 169
1. Introduction 169
2. The rise and maturation of EU territorial action 171
2.1. The birth of cohesion policy (1957-1989) 172
2.2. The emergence of European spatial planning (1989-1999) 175
2.3. Territorial cohesion (1999-present) 180
2.4. EU territorial action coming of age? The European Social Model and its
spatial and ecological dimensions 184
3. European imaginaries of maritime territorial vulnerability, equity, and
solidarity 189
3.1. Locating spatial justice 191
3.2. Territorial vulnerability as spatial peripherality and functional
marginality 196
3.3. Territorial vulnerability as ecological and cultural sensitivity 200
3.4. Prospects for the 'insurgent architects' of Europe's blue futures 207
4. Conclusion 214
5 Conclusion 238
Index 246