1st Edition

Marine Environmental Governance From International Law to Local Practice

By Erika Techera Copyright 2012
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    Marine Environmental Governance: From International Law to Local Practice considers the relationship between international environmental law and community-based management of marine areas. Focusing on small island states, in which indigenous populations have to a large extent continued to maintain traditional lifestyles, this book takes up the question of how indigenous customary law and state-based legislation can be reconciled in the implementation of international environmental law. Including a range of case studies, as well as detailed comparative analysis, it pursues an interdisciplinary approach to legal pluralism 'in practice' that will be of considerable interest to environmental lawyers, legal anthropologists, conservation biologists and those working in the area of community-based conservation.

    Chapter 1, Introduction; Chapter 2, Global Sustainable Development: theory, practice and law; Chapter 3, Marine environmental law, fisheries and Small Island States; Chapter 4, Communities and conservation; Chapter 5, The role of environmental law in post-colonial societies; Chapter 6, Legal approaches to community-based marine management; Chapter 7, Case Studies; Chapter 8, Comparative Analysis; Chapter 9, The Way Forward

    Biography

    Erika J Techera is the Director of the Centre for International & Environmental law at Macquarie University, Australia. She researches in international and comparative environmental law, focusing upon marine environmental governance in the Pacific region. Her publications include ‘Marine Protected Areas Policy and Legislation Gap Analysis: Fiji Islands’, Suva: IUCN/WWF, 2009, co-authored with S Troniak