Protected Marine Areas
Author | : Henry Augier |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 133 |
Release | : 1985 |
Genre | : Biotec communities |
ISBN | : 9789287107848 |
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Author | : Henry Augier |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 133 |
Release | : 1985 |
Genre | : Biotec communities |
ISBN | : 9789287107848 |
Author | : Jaco Barendse |
Publisher | : Frontiers Media SA |
Total Pages | : 262 |
Release | : 2023-08-01 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 2832528856 |
Author | : Massimo Lando |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 435 |
Release | : 2019-06-06 |
Genre | : Law |
ISBN | : 110849739X |
The first study of the three-stage approach to maritime delimitation, collating methods from judicial decisions, treaties and scholarship.
Author | : Michael B. Miller |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 453 |
Release | : 2012-08-20 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 1139536907 |
Europe and the Maritime World: A Twentieth-Century History offers a framework for understanding globalization over the past century. Through a detailed analysis of ports, shipping and trading companies whose networks spanned the world, Michael B. Miller shows how a European maritime infrastructure made modern production and consumer societies possible. He argues that the combination of overseas connections and close ties to home ports contributed to globalization. Miller also explains how the ability to manage merchant shipping's complex logistics was central to the outcome of both world wars. He chronicles transformations in hierarchies, culture, identities and port city space, all of which produced a new and different maritime world by the end of the century.
Author | : Michael Keith |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 2004-11-23 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 1134877420 |
In the last two decades, new political subjects have been created through the actions of the new social movements; often by asserting the unfixed and `overdetermined' character of identity. Further, in attempting to avoid essentialism, people have frequently looked to their territorial roots to establish their constituency. A cultural politics of resistance, as exemplified by Black politics, feminism, and gay liberation, has developed struggles to turn sites of oppression and discrimintion into spaces of resistance. This book collects together perspectives which challenge received notions of geography; which are in danger of becoming anachronisms, without a language to articulate the new space of resistance, the new politics of identity.
Author | : Eric Hirsch |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 281 |
Release | : 1995 |
Genre | : Nature |
ISBN | : 0198280106 |
Landscape has long had a submerged presence within anthropology, both as a framing device which informs the way the anthropologist brings his or her study into 'view', and as the meaning imputed by local people to their cultural and physical surroundings. A principal aim of this volume follows from these interconnected ways of considering landscape: the conventional, Western notion of 'landscape' may be used as productive point of departure from which to explore analgous ideas; local ideas can in turn reflexively by used to interrogate the Western construct. The Introduction argues that landscape should be conceptualized as a cultural process: a process located between place and space, inside and outside, image and representation. In the chapters that follow, nine noted anthropologists and an art historian exemplify this approach, drawing on a diverse set of case studies. These range from an analysis of Indian calendar art to an account of Israeli nature tourism, and from the creation of a metropolitan "gaze" in nineteenth-century Paris to the soundscapes particular to the Papua New Guinea rainforests. The anthropological perspectives developed here are of cross-disciplinary relevance; geographers, art historians, and archaeologists will be no less interested than anthropologists in this re-envisaging of the notion of landscape.
Author | : Jessica S. Sanders |
Publisher | : Food & Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO) |
Total Pages | : 128 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Business & Economics |
ISBN | : |
The five case studies from Belize, Mauritania, Samoa, Philippines and Japan were prepared as part of a set of 16 studies gathering national experiences from around the world. The studies are intended to ground the FAO Technical Guidelines on Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) and Fisheries1 in practical experience and to inform the use of MPAs globally
Author | : Colin W. Newbury |
Publisher | : University of Hawaii Press |
Total Pages | : 384 |
Release | : 2019-03-31 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0824880323 |
Tahiti Nui is an account of the survival of a Polynesian society in the face of successive settlements of missionaries, traders, and administrators. Beginning with the first explorers and Captain Cook's scientific observations at Point Venus, Dr. Newbury has separated the various strands interwoven in the fabric of Tahitian society, tracing their development and showing how they interacted at successive stages. Missionaries and foreign traders, administrators and Polynesians, planters and immigrant Chinese have all contributed to the distinctive flavor of French Polynesia, with Tahiti and Tahitians becoming increasingly dominant, not just as the focus of the French administration in Pape'ete, but in the social networks and trading patterns that have evolved.