Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles

The Bering Strait, separating the North American and Asian continents, is a productive social–ecological marine system that is vulnerable to increasing maritime traffic. In other parts of the world, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), an agency of the United Nations, has designated simila...

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Main Authors: Hillmer-Pegram, Kevin, Robards, Martin D.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss1/art26/
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spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/7081 2023-05-15T15:11:26+02:00 Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles Hillmer-Pegram, Kevin Robards, Martin D. 2015-02-03 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss1/art26/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 20, No. 1 (2015) Arctic; ecosystem services; indigenous; international shipping; law; marine protected area; praxis; transboundary; whale Peer-Reviewed Reports 2015 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:23:01Z The Bering Strait, separating the North American and Asian continents, is a productive social–ecological marine system that is vulnerable to increasing maritime traffic. In other parts of the world, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), an agency of the United Nations, has designated similar marine systems as a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA) in an effort to protect vulnerable resources from international shipping. We present information about the 14 existing PSSAs around the world and the political process by which designation is achieved. We examine specific characteristics of the Bering Strait system that are relevant to a PSSA application; these include vulnerable resources such as marine mammals and their contribution to the food and cultural security of indigenous communities, threats to these resources from shipping activities, and the viable mitigation options to reduce these threats. We then use five criteria derived from empirical research on resilience-based governance to analyze whether a PSSA designation would promote the resilience of marine mammal populations and indigenous communities to increased maritime activities. Despite the elusiveness of a definitive answer, we conclude that although the designation is not a perfect fit from a theoretical standpoint, it still holds the potential to benefit marine mammals and indigenous communities in terms of resilience. We conclude by identifying critical challenges and trade-offs that practitioners would need to negotiate when attempting to apply theoretical governance principles via real-world policy tools. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Bering Strait Unknown Arctic Bering Strait
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic Arctic; ecosystem services; indigenous; international shipping; law; marine protected area; praxis; transboundary; whale
spellingShingle Arctic; ecosystem services; indigenous; international shipping; law; marine protected area; praxis; transboundary; whale
Hillmer-Pegram, Kevin
Robards, Martin D.
Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles
topic_facet Arctic; ecosystem services; indigenous; international shipping; law; marine protected area; praxis; transboundary; whale
description The Bering Strait, separating the North American and Asian continents, is a productive social–ecological marine system that is vulnerable to increasing maritime traffic. In other parts of the world, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), an agency of the United Nations, has designated similar marine systems as a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA) in an effort to protect vulnerable resources from international shipping. We present information about the 14 existing PSSAs around the world and the political process by which designation is achieved. We examine specific characteristics of the Bering Strait system that are relevant to a PSSA application; these include vulnerable resources such as marine mammals and their contribution to the food and cultural security of indigenous communities, threats to these resources from shipping activities, and the viable mitigation options to reduce these threats. We then use five criteria derived from empirical research on resilience-based governance to analyze whether a PSSA designation would promote the resilience of marine mammal populations and indigenous communities to increased maritime activities. Despite the elusiveness of a definitive answer, we conclude that although the designation is not a perfect fit from a theoretical standpoint, it still holds the potential to benefit marine mammals and indigenous communities in terms of resilience. We conclude by identifying critical challenges and trade-offs that practitioners would need to negotiate when attempting to apply theoretical governance principles via real-world policy tools.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Hillmer-Pegram, Kevin
Robards, Martin D.
author_facet Hillmer-Pegram, Kevin
Robards, Martin D.
author_sort Hillmer-Pegram, Kevin
title Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles
title_short Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles
title_full Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles
title_fullStr Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles
title_full_unstemmed Relevance of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area to the Bering Strait Region: a Policy Analysis Using Resilience-Based Governance Principles
title_sort relevance of a particularly sensitive sea area to the bering strait region: a policy analysis using resilience-based governance principles
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2015
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss1/art26/
geographic Arctic
Bering Strait
geographic_facet Arctic
Bering Strait
genre Arctic
Bering Strait
genre_facet Arctic
Bering Strait
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 20, No. 1 (2015)
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