GOVERNING EUROPES MARINE ENVIRONMENT
Corbett Centre for Maritime Policy Studies Series
Series editors:
Professor Greg Kennedy, Dr Tim Benbow and Dr Jon Robb-Webb, Defence Studies Department, Joint Services Command and Staff College, UK
The Corbett Centre for Maritime Policy Studies Series is the publishing platform of the Corbett Centre. Drawing on the expertise and wider networks of the Defence Studies Department of Kings College London, and based at the Joint Services Command and Staff College in the UK Defence Academy, the Corbett Centre is already a leading centre for academic expertise and education in maritime and naval studies. It enjoys close links with several other institutions, both academic and governmental, that have an interest in maritime matters, including the Developments, Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC), the Naval Staff of the Ministry of Defence and the Naval Historical Branch.
The centre and its publishing output aims to promote the understanding and analysis of maritime history and policy and to provide a forum for the interaction of academics, policy-makers and practitioners. Books published under the eagis of the Corbett Centre series reflect these aims and provide an opportunity to stimulate research and debate into a broad range of maritime related themes. The core subject matter for the series is maritime strategy and policy, conceived broadly to include theory, history and practice, military and civil, historical and contemporary, British and international aspects.
As a result this series offers a unique opportunity to examine key issues such as maritime security, the future of naval power, and the commercial uses of the sea, from an exceptionally broad chronological, geographical and thematic range. Truly interdisciplinary in its approach, the series welcomes books from across the humanities, social sciences and professional worlds, providing an unrivalled opportunity for authors and readers to enhance the national and international visibility of maritime affairs, and provide a forum for policy debate and analysis.
Governing Europes Marine Environment
Europeanization of Regional Seas or Regionalization of EU Policies?
Edited by
MICHAEL GILEK
Sdertrn University, Sweden
KRISTINE KERN
Leibniz Institute for Regional Development and University of Potsdam, Germany
First published 2015 by Ashgate Publishing
Published 2016 by Routledge
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Copyright The editors and contributors 2015
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows:
A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress
ISBN 9781409447276 (hbk)
ISBN 9781315585543 (ebk-PDF)
ISBN 9781317125709 (ebk-ePUB)
Contents
Kristine Kern and Michael Gilek
Svein Jentoft and Ratana Chuenpagdee
Jan P.M. van Tatenhove
Brita Bohman and David Langlet
Monica Hammer
Elizabeth De Santo
Marion Dreyer and Piet Sellke
Michael Gilek, Mikael Karlsson, Oksana Udovyk and Sebastian Linke
Sara Sderstrm, Kristine Kern and Bjrn Hassler
Jan P.M. van Tatenhove and Judith van Leeuwen
Juan Lus Surez de Vivero and Juan Carlos Rodrguez Mateos
Stle Knudsen
Michael Gilek, Bjrn Hassler and Svein Jentoft
List of Figures and Tables
Figures
Tables
Notes on Contributors
Editors
Michael Gilek is Associate Professor in Ecology/Ecotoxicology at Sdertrn University and has extensive research experience on chemical pollution and other ecological risks in the aquatic environment, as well as on associated science-policy interactions. In his current research Dr Gilek leads international interdisciplinary studies analysing marine spatial planning and environmental governance in the Baltic Sea.
Kristine Kern is Professor in Governance of Urban Infrastructure and Global Change, University of Potsdam and Leibniz Institute for Regional Development and Structural Planning (IRS). Her current research interests are in the areas of local and regional climate and energy policy, sustainable development of cities and regions, transnational networks of cities, European regional seas (Baltic Sea in particular) and the EU macro-regional strategies.
Contributors
Brita Bohman is a doctoral candidate in Environmental Law at Stockholm University. Her doctoral work is part of the transdisciplinary project Baltic Ecosystem Adaptive Management (BEAM) and focuses on prerequisites for effective ecosystem-based control of eutrophication in the Baltic Sea through international and EU law.
Ratana Chuenpagdee is Canada Research Chair in Natural Resource Sustainability and Community Development at the Memorial University of Newfoundland with a specialization on interdependencies between natural and human systems. Main current research topics include fisheries and ocean governance, small-scale fisheries sustainability, environmental stewardship, and community viability.
Elizabeth De Santo is Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at Franklin & Marshall College. Her teaching and research focus on (1) the conservation and management of marine species and habitats, and (2) improving the science-policy interface in environmental decision-making. She is particularly interested in the challenges of effectively implementing Marine Protected Areas and biodiversity conservation worldwide.
Marion Dreyer is Deputy Scientific Director at DIALOGIK, which is a non-profit institute for communication and cooperation research. Her main fields of interest are risk governance and participation and cooperation processes in areas of societal controversy and conflict. In her ongoing research Dr Dreyer deals with water issues in terms of precaution-based strategies to deal with anthropogenic micro-pollutants in the water cycle.
Monica Hammer is Associate Professor in Natural Resource Management and Research leader at the Centre for Baltic and East European Studies at Sdertrn University. Her research interests focuses on sustainability of integrated social-ecological systems and the services provided by ecosystems in the Baltic Sea region.