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A sweeping overview of the problems, politics, and policies of
international and domestic management of the world's oceans. The
world ocean is one of the most important global resources. Without
it most life on earth would not survive because the ocean provides
temperature regulation and produces oxygen, among other vital
functions. However, this life-sustaining resource faces dangerous
threats from over fishing, industrial wastes, oil pollution, and
loss of biodiversity. Ocean Politics and Policy covers the major
types of pollution, deep sea-bed mining, international
jurisdictional disputes, and piracy, examining the underlying
reasons for these problems and providing practical policy
suggestions for reducing their impact. Special focus is placed on
historical and contemporary ocean laws, from the concept of
"freedom of the seas" to the 2001 Fishery Stock Agreement. Solving
the problems facing the world ocean should be a high priority for
the international community, and this book provides a starting
place for this process. Provides a chronology of the development of
ocean management Reproduces portions of documents along with
important raw data on world fish catch trends and whale populations
The Power of the Talking Stick makes the case that, reaching back
to the beginning of the nation-state and all through the current
period of corporate-led globalisation, our governments and social
institutions have been engaged in activities that will ultimately
extinguish the world's ecological life support systems. This book
offers an alternative, listening to indigenous leaders and others
whose voices often go unheard in the din of contemporary culture.
Sharon Ridgeway and Peter Jacques offer a stark warning, but their
insights are firmly grounded in traditional knowledge and provide a
way to see past the politics and rescue the earth. An important
resource for climate activists, students and academics.
The Power of the Talking Stick makes the case that, reaching back
to the beginning of the nation-state and all through the current
period of corporate-led globalisation, our governments and social
institutions have been engaged in activities that will ultimately
extinguish the world's ecological life support systems. This book
offers an alternative, listening to indigenous leaders and others
whose voices often go unheard in the din of contemporary culture.
Sharon Ridgeway and Peter Jacques offer a stark warning, but their
insights are firmly grounded in traditional knowledge and provide a
way to see past the politics and rescue the earth. An important
resource for climate activists, students and academics.
'Environmental skepticism' describes the viewpoint that major
environmental problems are either unreal or unimportant. In other
words, environmental skepticism holds that environmental problems,
especially global ones, are inauthentic. Peter Jacques describes,
both empirically and historically, how environmental skepticism has
been organized by mostly US-based conservative think tanks as an
anti-environmental counter-movement. This is the first book to
analyze the importance of the US conservative counter-movement in
world politics and its meaning for democratic and accountable
deliberation, as well as its importance as a mal-adaptive project
that hinders the world's people to rise to the challenges of
sustainability. Specific consideration is given to the threat of
the counter-movement to marginalized people of the world and its
philosophical implications through its commitment to a 'deep
anthropocentrism'.
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