E-Book, Englisch, 363 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Springer Polar Sciences
Scott / Stephens / McGee Geopolitical Change and the Antarctic Treaty System
1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-981-97-9808-7
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Historical Lessons, Current Challenges
E-Book, Englisch, 363 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Springer Polar Sciences
ISBN: 978-981-97-9808-7
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
This book explores how geopolitical tensions have shaped the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS) and offers insights into managing future challenges. The ATS, established with the 1959 Antarctic Treaty during the Cold War, has been a successful model of international governance, ensuring Antarctica's peaceful use and environmental protection. However, the ATS now faces new pressures, including an expanded membership of 57 states, increased economic activities such as tourism, fishing, and bio-prospecting, and the impacts of climate change. These factors are exacerbating geopolitical tensions that could challenge the stability of the ATS.
The book examines key moments in the history of the ATS to understand how past tensions were managed and what lessons can be drawn for the future. The volume covers the creation of the CCAMLR marine conservation treaty in the late 1970s-1980s; the developing world's opposition to the ATS in United Nations debates during the 1980s-1990s; the shift from permitting Antarctic mining to establishing the Madrid Protocol on Environmental Protection in the early 1990s; the formation of the International Association of Antarctic Tourism Operators; the management of Illegal, Unregulated, and Unreported (IUU) fishing in the 2000s; and the proposals for marine protected areas under the CCAMLR Convention in recent years. Several contributions also draw on critical and regional perspectives to make sense of geopolitical pressures on Antarctic governance and how they might play out over the years and decades ahead.
Through its attention both to critical turning points in the history of the ATS, and a broad range of conceptual approaches, the book provides an authoritative assessment of the ATS's capacity to address emerging geopolitical stresses and provides strategies for future governance. It is a timely resource for understanding the evolving dynamics in Antarctica and ensuring the region remains a zone of peace and scientific collaboration.
This book is a companion volume to McGee, Edmiston and Haward, 2022, The Future of Antarctica: Scenarios form Classical Geopolitics, in the Springer Polar Sciences Series.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1. The Antarctic Treaty System in the Context of Geopolitical, Technological and Environmental Change.- Part I. Historical Case Studies.- Chapter 2. Management of Southern Ocean marine living resources: The origins and development of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.- Chapter 3. The tension between regional and universal regimes for Antarctic governance.- Chapter 4. Managing Antarctic tourism: Cooperation between industry and Antarctic Treaty Consultative Parties.- Chapter 5. The CAMLR Convention and IUU Fishing.- Chapter 6. CCAMLR current challenges: Implementation of marine spatial planning for marine biodiversity conservation.- Chapter 7. Antarctic heritage as a nation-building block since 1972.- Part II. Current Geopolitical Tensions in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.- Chapter 8. Implications of Current Global Tensions on the Effectiveness of the Antarctic Treaty System.- Chapter 9. Environmental change and geopolitical tension in the Antarctic Treaty System.- Chapter 10. Consensus under pressure in CCAMLR: Suggesting rigour and clarity in process and interpretation to help alleviate internal and external pressures.- Chapter 11. Non-militarisation of Antarctica: Geopolitical foundations and challenges.- Chapter 12. Geopolitical changes and futures of CCAMLR.- Chapter 13. Sub-Antarctic Islands: Sovereignty issues.- Chapter 14. Mining in Antarctica to 2048 and beyond.- Part III. Perspectives on Antarctic Geopolitics.- Chapter 15. Classical geopolitics and Antarctica.- Chapter 16. Feminist perspectives.- Chapter 17. Chinese perspectives on Antarctic geopolitics.- Chapter 18. A South American Perspective on Antarctic Geopolitics.- Chapter 19. An Indian Perspective on Antarctic Geopolitics: Balancing between Normative and Instrumental Imperatives.- Part IV. Conclusions.- Chapter 20. Synthesis and lessons drawn.