The Oceans and Environmental Security: Shared U.S. And Russian Perspectives

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James Broadus, Raphael V. Vartanov
Island Press, 24 abr 2013 - 350 páginas

The concept of environmental security, drawing on the widely understood notion of international strategic interdependence (in facing, for example, threats of nuclear war or economic collapse) is gaining currency as a way of thinking about international environmental management.

In 1989, the Institute for World Economy and International Relations of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Marine Policy Center of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution instituted a joint project to examine environmental security as it applies to the world's oceans. The Oceans and Environmental Security is a unified expression of their findings.

The oceans, as global commons, are of central importance to issues of international environmental security. Critical problems are those that are likely to destabilize normal relations between nations and provoke international countermeasures. As such, the book focuses on seven specific concerns:

  • land-based marine pollution
  • North Pacific fisheries depletion
  • hazardous materials transport
  • nuclear contamination
  • the Arctic Ocean
  • the Southern Ocean and Antarctica
  • the Law of the Sea

Sobre el autor (2013)

James M. Broadus was director of the Marine Policy Center, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. Raphael V. Vartanov is head of the Section on Ocean Development and Environment, Institute of World Economy and International Relations, Russian Academy of Sciences.

Información bibliográfica