2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11236796
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Earth System Law for the Anthropocene

Abstract: Law has failed to address the ever-deepening socio-ecological crisis of the Anthropocene. In the light of, and as a response to, law’s failures in this respect, this paper argues in support of developing a new legal paradigm for the Anthropocene epoch called Earth system law. It does so first by briefly describing the Anthropocene trope and the extent and dimensions of its socio-ecological crisis. The paper then specifically focuses on international environmental law as an example of how and why law has become… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(27 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…The governance mechanisms for managing both adaptive and transformative change require radical shifts if a more responsive global ocean governance system is to be established 10 , 30 , 67 , 68 . Reconfigured nation-state authority 69 would occur by introducing principles such as reflexive, iterative governance (for example the voluntary national review process established for implementation and review of the UN Agenda 2020 70 ) (Glossary in Table 1 ), by including polycentric modes of governance (nested scales of governance from local to national or global scales, demonstrated by the Belize and Chilean examples, Table 2 , Boxes 2 and 3 ), and by creating meta-governance frameworks (such as the regime in Antarctica (Antarctic Treaty System 71 ).…”
Section: Pathways For Transition To a Sustainable Ocean Economymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The governance mechanisms for managing both adaptive and transformative change require radical shifts if a more responsive global ocean governance system is to be established 10 , 30 , 67 , 68 . Reconfigured nation-state authority 69 would occur by introducing principles such as reflexive, iterative governance (for example the voluntary national review process established for implementation and review of the UN Agenda 2020 70 ) (Glossary in Table 1 ), by including polycentric modes of governance (nested scales of governance from local to national or global scales, demonstrated by the Belize and Chilean examples, Table 2 , Boxes 2 and 3 ), and by creating meta-governance frameworks (such as the regime in Antarctica (Antarctic Treaty System 71 ).…”
Section: Pathways For Transition To a Sustainable Ocean Economymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The scale and scope of the contemporary transition required now is similar to that of the transition from hunter-gatherers to agrarian societies, and from agrarian societies to industrial societies 33 , 73 . In order to navigate the myriad complexities of this ocean transition, a balancing of economic, social and environmental objectives is required 5 , 10 . For example, the transformative approach of the United Nations’ 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs; specifically SDG 14—life below water) weaves together the numerous strands of sustainable development into an integrated set of ambitious goals that provides “coherence between policies and sectors, in all contexts—local, regional, national, transnational and global” 26 .…”
Section: Pathways For Transition To a Sustainable Ocean Economymentioning
confidence: 99%
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