Antarctica: Legal and Environmental Challenges for the Future

Subjects:
Environmental Law
Contents:
Foreword
Sir Michael Wood
Introduction
Professor Gillian Triggs and Anna Riddell
The Antarctic Treaty System: Legal and Environmental Issues
Future Challenges for the Antarctic Treaty System
Marie Jacobsson
The Secretariat of the Antarctic Treaty: Achievements and Weaknesses Three Years After its Establishment
Patrizia Vigni
IUU Fishing in the Southern Ocean: Challenge and Response
Stuart Kaye
The Emerging Legal Regime for Navigation through Ice-Infested Antarctic
Christopher Joyner
Some Current Issues Facing the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Alan Brown
Responding to Environmental Damage in Antarctica
Louise de La Fayette
Antarctic Tourism Policy-Making: Current Challenges and Future Prospects
Debra Enzenbacher
Vessel-Sourced Pollution in the Southern Ocean: Benefits and Shortcomings of Regional Regulation
Ivana Zovko
The Antarctic Treaty 1959
Agreed Measures for the Conservation of Antarctic Flora and Fauna 1964
Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals 1972
Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty 1991
Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources 1982
The Liability Annex 2005 (Annex VI to the Protocol on Environmental Protection)
Convention on the Regulation of Antarctic Mineral Resource Activities 1988
International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling 1946
ATCM XXIX Report, and Measures, Decisions and Resolutions
House of Lords Debate on the International Polar Year 2007–
08
Edited by: Gillian Triggs, Anna Riddell

ISBN13: 9781905221097
ISBN: 1905221096
Published: April 2007
Publisher: British Institute of International and Comparative Law
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Paperback
Price: £0.00

Since its inception almost 50 years ago, the Antarctic Treaty System has evolved to provide a stable and remarkably effective regime for management of the coldest, driest and windiest continent on earth. New challenges to this legal regime are now posed by contemporary problems such as climate change, tourism, and fishing and whaling in the Southern Ocean. For State Parties to the web of treaties that make up the Antarctic system of governance, the 21st century brings new demands for environmental protection while ensuring reasonable access for scientists and tourists alike.

The papers in this collection were presented at a conference organized by the British Institute of International and Comparative Law and the United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office to coincide with the Twenty-Ninth Meeting of the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Parties held in Edinburgh in June 2006. The authors, experienced Antarctic ‘watchers’, discuss their views on:-

  • Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing
  • Vessel-based pollution
  • Navigation through ice-covered waters
  • Antarctic Treaty Secretariat
  • Liability of operators and their States for environmental damage
  • Tourism
Included with these scholarly papers are all the international agreements that make up the Antarctic Treaty System along with the Measures, Decisions and Resolutions of the Twenty-Ninth Consultative Party Meeting and the Edinburgh Declaration supporting the scientific research of the forthcoming International Polar Year starting in March 2007.

The collection provides an accessible analysis of the legal and environmental issues for Antarctica in the first decade of the 21st century for government officials and advisors, scholars, students, legal practitioners and scientists.