Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

International Fisheries Management [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 606 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Dec-2000
  • Kirjastus: Kluwer Law International
  • ISBN-10: 9041198202
  • ISBN-13: 9789041198204
  • Formaat: Hardback, 606 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Dec-2000
  • Kirjastus: Kluwer Law International
  • ISBN-10: 9041198202
  • ISBN-13: 9789041198204
Kaye (law, James Cook U., Queensland) analyzes two principal approaches to fisheries management with reference to international law. The first approach, reflected in the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, aims to maximize the yield of particular fish stocks. The second is founded on the precautionary approach and the associated concept of risk assessment, which take into account the management of the entire ecosystem. Kaye examines the difficulties common to both approaches in the area of compliance and presents suggestions for improving the management of stocks. His analysis focuses on the Bering Sea "Doughnut Hole" Convention and the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Abbreviations xiii
Acknowledgements xix
Introduction
1(14)
Statement of Objectives
1(6)
Comparing the Poles
7(8)
Regime Theory and International Fisheries Management
15(28)
State Satisfaction-International Relations Regime Theory
16(7)
Epistemic Communities
23(16)
Stakeholder Satisfaction - Exploitation
39(2)
Stakeholder Satisfaction - Environmental Protection
41(2)
Development of International Fisheries Management Prior to Unclos III
43(46)
Fisheries Management Theory prior to 1945
43(6)
Maximum Sustainable Yield and Maximum Economic Yield
49(11)
International Law and Management Theory
60(15)
1945 to UNCLOS I
60(5)
UNCLOS I and the Geneva High Seas Fisheries Convention
65(10)
International Cooperation and the Enclosure of the Seas
75(14)
International Fisheries Management Under the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention
89(74)
Territorial Sea and Internal Waters
90(2)
Exclusive Economic Zone
92(19)
UNCLOS III
92(6)
Provisions of the Law of the Sea Convention
98(13)
Duties of Cooperation
111(12)
Highly Migratory Species
123(5)
Marine Mammals
128(5)
Anadromous Stocks
133(5)
Catadromous Stocks
138(3)
Sedentary Species
141(1)
High Seas
142(15)
Southern Bluefin Tuna Cases
155(2)
Straddling Stocks
157(6)
The Precautionary Approach and International Fisheries Management
163(104)
The Precautionary Approach
167(20)
Definition
167(7)
Precaution in International Environmental Law
174(8)
Status of Precaution at International Law
182(5)
The Emergence of the Precautionary Approach in Fisheries Management
187(70)
Challenges to Traditional Management
187(10)
UNCED
197(1)
Background
197(4)
Agenda 21
201(4)
FAO
205(1)
1984 World Fisheries: Strategy
205(4)
Change in Direction: Declaration of Cancun
209(4)
High Seas Fisheries Compliance Agreement
213(4)
The Emergence of Precaution
217(4)
Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries
221(8)
UN Conference on Straddling and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks
229(1)
Background
229(4)
Precaution and the Straddling and HIghly Migratory Fish Stocks Agreement
233(8)
Cooperative Management Measures
241(9)
Enforcement
250(6)
Other Provisions
256(1)
Customary International Law and the Precautionary Approach to Fisheries Management
257(10)
Ecosystem Management and International Fisheries
267(20)
Introduction
267(2)
Ecosystem Management as a Concept
269(4)
Ecosystem Management and Precaution
273(1)
International Law and Ecosystem Management
274(10)
UNCED
275(5)
FAO
280(2)
Straddling and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks Agreement
282(2)
Ecosystem Management as Custom
284(3)
Co-Management of International Fisheries
287(42)
Introduction
287(5)
Definition
292(9)
Co-Management and Fisheries Management
301(1)
Co-Management and International Law
302(3)
Bering Sea Fisheries Prior to 1994
Introduction
305(3)
Pollock Fishery of the Bering Sea
308(3)
Collapse of the High Seas Pollock Fishery: 1984--1994
311(18)
Changes in Fishery Patterns
311(4)
Challenge and Response
315(7)
International Law and the Negotiation of the Doughnut Hole Regime
322(7)
The Bering Sea Doughnut Hole Convention
329(26)
Participation
329(7)
Objectives
336(1)
Structure
337(5)
Enforcement
342(3)
Operation of the Doughnut Hole Convention
345(10)
Antarctic Treaty Management of Southern Ocean Fisheries
355(44)
Marine Living Resource Regimes in the Antarctic
355(6)
CCAMLR - Negotiation
361(6)
Approach to Management
367(8)
Membership
375(2)
Structures
377(9)
Enforcement and Jurisdiction
386(13)
The Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources in Action
399(44)
Decision-Making
399(8)
Ecosystem Management
407(8)
Management
415(9)
CCAMLR in Crisis: The Decline of the Patagonian Toothfish
424(19)
The Anatomy of the Crisis
424(5)
Responses of CCAMLR to the Crisis
429(4)
CCAMLR and Third States
433(6)
Catch Documentation
439(4)
Lessons From Polar Fisheries
443(18)
Introduction
443(1)
State Satisfaction-International relations
444(9)
Regime Theory
444(4)
Epistemic Communities
448(5)
Stakeholder Satisfaction - Exploitation
453(2)
Stakeholder Satisfaction - Environmental Protection
455(6)
The Future of International Fisheries Management
461(42)
Introduction
461(3)
Compliance
464(18)
Coastal State
467(6)
Flag State
473(2)
Non-Flag State
475(5)
Nationality
480(2)
Suggested Solutions
482(14)
Universality and Objective Regimes
482(6)
Technology and Compliance
488(2)
Co-Management
490(6)
Conclusion
496(7)
Bibliography 503(90)
Index 593