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"This book's title is taken from Mohandas Gandhi's comparison of the social order to the ever-widening circles that result when a stone is dropped in the ocean. This human order encompasses the individual, the village, the nation, the region, and the global community. Just such an order is now emerging in the context of ocean governance, generated by the United Nations' 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea and the subsequent conventions, agreements and programmes following the 1992 Rio Earth Summit. ... Such an order is needed to solve the most urgent problems of over-fishing and stock depletion; pollution from oceanic, atmospheric and land-based sources; climate and sea-level changes; and biodiversity conservation."--Publisher's description
Ocean --- NATURE --- Ecosystems & Habitats / Oceans & Seas --- Oceans --- Sea, The --- Bodies of water --- Oceanography --- Social aspects. --- International Ocean Institute. --- Club of Rome. --- Club de Roma --- Club de Rome --- Club van Rome --- Klub Rzymski --- Klub van Rome --- Lo-ma chü le pu --- Nādī Rūmā --- Rimskiĭ klub --- Rōma Kurabu --- Rooman klubi --- ローマ・クラブ --- Pacem in Maribus (Organization) --- Institut international de l'océan --- IOI
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The “Blue Economy” is used to describe all of the economic activities related to the sea, with a special emphasis on sustainability. Traditional activities such as fisheries, but also undersea mining, tourism, and scientific research are included, as well as the phenomenal growth of aquaculture during the past decade. All of these activities, and the irresistible prospect of another new frontier, has led to enthusiastic and, most likely, overenthusiastic assessments of the possibilities to exploit the sea to feed the world, provide low-cost energy, become a new source of minerals, and other future miracles. This book makes sense of these trends and of the future of the blue economy by following our remote ancestors who gradually discovered the sea and its resources, describing the so-called fisherman’s curse – or why fishermen have always been poor, explaining why humans tend to destroy the resources on which we depend, and assessing the realistic expectations for extracting resources from the sea. Although the sea is not so badly overexploited as the land, our demands on ecosystem services are already above the oceans’ sustainability limits. Some new ideas, including “fishing down” for untapped resources such as plankton, could lead to the collapse of the entire marine ecosystem. How Neanderthals crossed the sea in canoes, how it was possible for five men on a small boat to kill a giant whale, what kind of oil the virgins of the Gospel put into their lamps, how a professor of mathematics, Vito Volterra, discovered the “equations of fishing,” why it has become so easy to be stung by a jellyfish while swimming in the sea, and how to play “Moby Dick,” a simple board game that simulates the overexploitation of natural resources are just some of the questions that you will be able to answer after reading this engaging and insightful book about the rapidly expanding relationship between humanity and the sea. .
Earth. --- Geology. --- Marine sciences. --- Freshwater. --- Natural resources. --- Geophysics. --- Oceanography. --- Sustainable development. --- Popular Earth Science. --- Marine & Freshwater Sciences. --- Natural Resource and Energy Economics. --- Geophysics and Environmental Physics. --- Sustainable Development. --- Development, Sustainable --- Ecologically sustainable development --- Economic development, Sustainable --- Economic sustainability --- ESD (Ecologically sustainable development) --- Smart growth --- Sustainable development --- Sustainable economic development --- Economic development --- Oceanography, Physical --- Oceanology --- Physical oceanography --- Thalassography --- Earth sciences --- Marine sciences --- Ocean --- Geological physics --- Terrestrial physics --- Physics --- National resources --- Natural resources --- Resources, Natural --- Resource-based communities --- Resource curse --- Fresh waters --- Freshwater --- Freshwaters --- Inland water --- Inland waters --- Water --- Ocean sciences --- Aquatic sciences --- Geognosy --- Geoscience --- Natural history --- Environmental aspects --- Economic aspects --- Marine resources. --- Club of Rome. --- Club de Roma --- Club de Rome --- Club van Rome --- Klub Rzymski --- Klub van Rome --- Lo-ma chü le pu --- Nādī Rūmā --- Rimskiĭ klub --- Rōma Kurabu --- Rooman klubi --- ローマ・クラブ --- Ocean resources --- Resources, Marine --- Sea resources --- Aquatic resources --- Commercial products --- Marine biology --- Oceanography
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