Marine Protected Areas in International law – an Arctic Perspective, introduces and analyzes the legal rights and obligations of states under international law, using Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) as a tool to protect marine biodiversity. The fragile Arctic marine environment is under growing pressure from climate change and the prospect of increasing human activity affecting previously untouched areas. The conservation of Arctic marine biodiversity is a pressing and global concern, not least because the melting of sea ice will have widespread effects. By analyzing regional cooperation through the OSPAR Convention and under the Arctic Council, Jakobsen examines the implementation of the global legal framework for biodiversity protection and conservation in the Arctic. The book has a particular focus on the possibilities of the states to regulate shipping within the MPAs, as the increasing shipping activities represent a major threat to the sensitive marine Arctic.
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Jakobsen: Marine Protected Areas in International Law: An Arctic Perspective
Ingvild Ulrikke Jakobsen (Univ. of Tromsø - K.G. Jebsen Centre for the Law of the Sea) has published Marine Protected Areas in International Law: An Arctic Perspective (Brill | Nijhoff 2016). Here's the abstract: