000 01849nam a22001337a 4500
020 _a978-1-78100-478-4
082 _a608.5
_bBOW
245 _aResearch Handbook on Biodiversity and Law
260 _aUK
_bEdward Elgar
_c2016
300 _axv, 490p.
650 _aPART I VISIONS, VALUES AND VOICES
_a1. Law, legal scholarship and the conservation of biological diversity: 2020 vision and beyond
_a2. In whose interest? Instrumental and intrinsic value in biodiversity law
_a3. Participatory resource management: a Caribbean case study
_a4. The role of non-state actors in treaty regimes for the protection of marine biodiversity
_aPART II. SIGNIFICANT THREATS TO BIODIVERSITY
_a5. Climate change, marine biodiversity and international law
_a6. Broad-spectrum efforts to enhance the conservation of vulnerable marine ecosystems
_a7. Alien invasive species: is the EU's strategy fit for purpose?
_a8. Countering fragmentation of habitats under international wildlife regimes
_a9. Armed conflict and biodiversity
_aPART III GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
_a10. The Convention on Biological Diversity and the concept of sustainable development: the extent and manner of the Convention's application of components of the concept
_a11. Whaling and inter-and intra-generational equity
_a12. Common concern, common heritage and other global(-ising) concepts: rhetorical devices, legal principles or a fundamental challenge?
_aPART IV REGULATORY CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES
_a13. Biodiversity, knowledge and the making of rights: reviewing the debates on bioprospectiing and ownership
_a14. Ecological restoration in international biodiversity law: a promising strategy to address our failure to prevent?
_a15. Non-compliance procedures and the implementation of commitments under wildlife treaties
700 _aBowman, Michael(ed). (etal...)
942 _cBK
999 _c348151
_d348151