Preserving Community Interests in Ocean Governance towards Sustainability 2nd Edition
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783036598871
- 9783036598888
- books978-3-0365-9887-1
- Law
- Agreement of Port State Measures (PSMA)
- Anthropocene era
- anthropogenic underwater noise
- Arctic cooperation
- Arctic governance
- Arctic sustainable development
- BBNJ Agreement
- China
- China's role
- climate debt
- coastal states
- continental shelf
- daily penalty system (DPS)
- debt relief
- deep seabed mining
- economic sustainability
- entropy value method
- environmental impact assessment
- environmental management and monitoring plans
- environmental sustainability
- exploitation regulations
- fish products
- future proposals
- globalization
- heavily indebted poor countries
- high seas fisheries
- high-seas MPAs
- human security
- illegal
- indicator system
- international conciliation
- international fisheries law
- international fisheries organisations
- international investment protection
- international law
- international law of climate action
- International Seabed Authority
- law of the sea
- linguistic entanglements in the law
- marine economy
- Marine Environment Protection Law (MEPL)
- marine environmental protection
- marine pollution
- maritime dispute
- maritime security
- maritime Silk Road
- multi-subject participation
- n/a
- ocean community
- ocean governance
- ocean renewable energy
- offshore wind energy
- policy exit
- positive-sum mentality
- precautionary approaches
- realistic obstacles
- regional environmental management plan
- renewable energy transition
- SDG 14
- South China Sea
- sovereign debt
- state responsibility
- sustainability
- sustainable development
- sustainable fishing
- sustainable management
- system effects
- traditional fishing rights
- UNCLOS
- unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing
- Yangtze River Delta
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
References to community interests appear from time to time in scholarly writings in the field of international relations and international law. The concept of community interests refers to interests protected by international law binding either all or a group of states and go beyond the delimitation of a sovereign sphere of influence. In the literature, there are existing examples of research, such as in books and journal articles, that consider the various manifestations of what has been described as "community interests" in many areas regulated by international law, including natural resources, global markets, human rights, and the use of force, and observe how law has evolved from a legal system based on more or less specific consent and aimed at promoting the particular interests of states, to one that is more generally oriented towards collectively protecting common interests and values. However, this topic has not been thoroughly researched, meaning that there is a huge gap in the existing literature, particularly in the context of ocean governance and sustainability. This Special Issue attempts to fill this gap, so as to attract more studies on this important topic in academia.
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