Maritime history, sustainable development and resource management

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to outline the intellectual pre-conditions for meaningful debate about resource management of the sea and its contents.Design methodology approach - The approach is historical and theoretical.Findings - The argument contends that because of the social and histo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Property management 2006-01, Vol.24 (2), p.179-195
1. Verfasser: Davies, Stephen N.G.
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creator Davies, Stephen N.G.
description Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to outline the intellectual pre-conditions for meaningful debate about resource management of the sea and its contents.Design methodology approach - The approach is historical and theoretical.Findings - The argument contends that because of the social and historical status of the sea and those who earn their living from it, comprehensive and accurate knowledge of the sea and its depths is conspicuously lacking, as is a sympathetic understanding. Historically, this has led, where attempts to manage the sea's resources are concerned, to a misconceived application of terrestrial legal concepts and approaches to an indivisible whole upon which, as a whole, Life itself depends.Practical implications - If the argument is correct, piecemeal local, national and regional attempts to manage marine resources may prove unable to achieve what is intended and may be counter-productive. Such smaller-scale regulation must depend on prior global agreement on marine resource management principles.Originality value - The paper attempts to lay out the broad framework within which alone constructive discussion of marine resource management is possible.
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Historically, this has led, where attempts to manage the sea's resources are concerned, to a misconceived application of terrestrial legal concepts and approaches to an indivisible whole upon which, as a whole, Life itself depends.Practical implications - If the argument is correct, piecemeal local, national and regional attempts to manage marine resources may prove unable to achieve what is intended and may be counter-productive. 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source Emerald Journals
subjects Culture
Ecology
Environmental management
Marine conservation
Maritime history
Oceans
Otherness
Property rights
Resource management
Seas
Studies
Sustainable development
title Maritime history, sustainable development and resource management
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