TY - BOOK AU - Vestergaard,Niels AU - Kaiser,Brooks A. AU - Fernandez,Linda AU - Nymand Larsen,Joan ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Arctic Marine Resource Governance and Development T2 - Springer Polar Sciences, SN - 9783319673653 AV - GE300-350 U1 - 333.7 PY - 2018/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Springer KW - Environmental management KW - Climate change KW - Law of the sea KW - International law KW - Natural resources KW - International relations KW - Environmental Management KW - Climate Change KW - Law of the Sea, Air and Outer Space KW - Natural Resource and Energy Economics KW - International Relations N1 - Preface -- 1. Sino-American Arctic Marine Resource Knowledge Networks and Governance -- 2. Transboundary Governance Capacity in the Arctic: A Framework for Inquiry -- 3. How Canadian and U.S. Arctic policies will adapt to the differing interests of the Nordic and Asian blocks on the Arctic Council -- 4. Reshaping Energy Governance in the Arctic? Assessing the Implications of LNG for European shipping companies -- 5. Much Ado About Nothing? Regulating Fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean -- 6. Marine co-management through the Torngat Joint Fisheries Board -- 7. Bio-economic analysis for Arctic Marine Resource Management Policy -- 8. Technical and Institutional Change: Past and Future Transitions in Resource-Based Inuit Communities -- 9. Ballast water and invasive species in the Arctic -- 10. Arctic Port Development -- Conclu sions N2 - This book is based on presentations from the Conference 'Arctic Marine Resource Governance' held in Reykjavik Iceland in October 2015. The book is divided into four main themes: 1. Global management and institutions for Arctic marine resources 2. Resource stewards and users: local and indigenous co-management 3. Governance gaps in Arctic marine resource management and 4. Multi-scale, ecosystem-based, Arctic marine resource management'. The ecosystem changes underway in the Arctic region are expected to have significant impacts on living resources in both the short and long run, and current actions and policies adopted over such resource governance will have serious and ultimately irreversible consequences in the near and long terms UR - https://s443-doi-org.br.lsproxy.net/10.1007/978-3-319-67365-3 ER -