Authors
Joseph F.C. DiMento and Alexis Jaclyn Hickman (editors)
NEW HORIZONS IN ENVIRONMENTAL AND ENERGY LAW SERIES
Publication Year
2012
Source
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
xviii+220 pages
The authors adopting a comprehensive and contextual approach to the environmental governance of the great seas provides an insightful analysis of six regional seas (The Baltic Sea, the Black Sea, the East Asian Seas, the Mediterranean Sea, the West and Central African Seas, and the Wider Caribbean Region) selecting them on certain criteria: accessibility of relevant literature on conditions of the sea; the nature and extent of threats; the nature and extent of threats; variety in the sources and causes of those conditions, and variety of governance schemes; geographical diversity; proposed solutions, seeking to identify particularly effective examples; and strategic importance.
The authors address the specific roles of the Law of the Sea and the United Nations Regional Seas Programme and discuss the importance of better information exchange between scientists and policymakers, increased funding, greater participation, and new and more effective laws. National, regional and international initiatives are conceptualized as clusters, and their success evaluated using three indicators of effectiveness: effectiveness indicated by physical parameters; effectiveness indicated by contributions of and to international environmental law; and effectiveness indicated by improved relations among states and peoples. Perhaps, the most pragmatic theoretical lesson to be drawn is embedded in their “word on causation”: “Our conclusions about activity in a cluster and outcomes are qualitative and general. It is not possible in the complex environments we are analyzing to describe convincing causal links between individual law and policy initiatives and actual outcomes (whether they be cooperation or improvement of the physical condition of the seas). Many other forces are at work in response of both physical and social systems. And even if elaborate modeling could describe pathways in a convincing manner, data challenges would be enormous, if not overwhelming”
The book will be of great interest to policymakers, students and scholars in the fields of law and policy as well as marine and environmental sciences.
TABLE OF CONTENTS |
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Acronyms
1. Introduction
The Great Seas in Context
Conditions
Challenges
Governance
Cluster constituents
The United Nations Law of the Sea
Regional Initiatives and the Regional Aspect of a General
Obligation
The United Nations Regional Seas Programme
Regional Seas Law
Role of UNEP
Assessment
Effectiveness Criteria Introduced
A Word on Causation
Choosing the Case Studies
Methodology
2. The Baltic Sea
Hermanni Backer with Joseph F.C. DiMento and Alexis Jaclyn Hickman
Physical Characteristics
Conditions of the Sea
The Cluster
Assessment
Conclusion
3. The Black Sea
Physical Characteristics
Conditions of the Sea
Regime Characteristics
The Cluster
Assessment
Conclusion
4. The East Asian Seas
Physical Characteristics
Conditions of the Seas
Regime Characteristics
The Cluster
Assessment
Conclusion
5. The Mediterranean Sea
Tullio Scovazzi with Joseph F.C. DiMento and Alexis Jaclyn Hickman
5A DiMento and Hickman
Introduction
Conditions and Sources
5B Scovazzi
The Governance of the Mediterranean Sea
Legal Complexities
The Regional Legal Instruments
The Barcelona System
Towards Governance of the Mediterranean
5C DiMento and Hickman
Assessment
Conclusion
6. The West and Central African Seas
Physical Characteristics
Conditions of the Seas
Regime Characteristics
The Cluster
Assessment
Conclusion
7. The Wider Caribbean Region
Physical Characteristics
Conditions of the Sea and Region
Regime Characteristics
The Cluster
Assessment
Conclusion
8. An Accounting
Assessment – Effectiveness Indicated by Physical Parameters
Assessment – Effectiveness Indicated by the Development
and Implementation of Environmental Law and Policy
Assessment – Effectiveness Indicated by Improved
Relations among States and Peoples
Governance – More Law?
Overall Effectiveness
Improved Governance
Specific Recommendations
General Recommendations
Appendix 1 List of Respondents
Appendix 2 Composite Regional Seas Study Survey Guide
References
Index
About the author

Joseph F.C. DiMento
Alexis Jaclyn Hickman
Ph.D. in Planning, Policy and Design and Masters in Urban Planning at the University of California, Irvine. She also served as a researcher for the Environment Institute as a part of an interdisciplinary research group, the Sustainability Science Team. She is now a Postdoctoral Associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the Center for Transportation and Logistics.