Biodiversity and Nature Protection Law - Cheltenham, UK Northampton, MA, USA Edward Elgar 2017 - xviii, 519p.

978-1-78347-424-0


PART 1. HISTORICAL AND CONCEPTUAL BACKGROUND
III. 1 Historical perspectives on the challenge of biodiversity conservation
III. 2 Sovereignty, conservation and sustainable use
III. 3 The historical roots of the North-South dynamic in biodiversity conservation and its imprint on the Convention on Biological Diversity
PART 2 PRINCIPLES AND APPROACHES
III. 4 Sustainable development and equity in biodiversity conservation
III. 5 The ecosystem approach and the precautionary principle
III. 6 Nature capital: valuation and payments for ecosystem services
PART 3. KEY THEMES
III. 7 Species-based conservation
III. 8 Terrestrial areas protection
III. 9 Marine biodiversity: unravelling the intricacies of global frameworks and applicable concepts
III. 10 Indigenous peoples and community conserved territories and areas(ICCAs): evolution in International biodiversity law
III. 11 Mountain biodiversity
III. 12 Island biodiversity
III. 13 Inland water biodiversity: international law on protection of transboundary freshwater ecosystems and biodiversity
III. 14 Forest biodiversity
III. 15 Dryland biodiversity: ecosystems, people and the law
PART 4 CROSS-CUTTING ISSUES
III. 20 Invasive alien species
III. 21 Biodiversity and climate change
III. 22 REDD+ and biodiversity
III. 23 Trade, investment and biodiversity conservation
III. 24 Gender and the Convention on Biological Diversity
III. 25 Biofuels
III. 26 Technology transfer
III. 27 Ecotourism
PART 5 ACTORS
III. 28 Non-state actors
III. 29 International financial institutions and biodiversity conservation
III. 30 European Union
PART 6 IMPLEMENTATION, ENFORCEMENT AND COMPLIANCE

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