Who Owns the Sea?

The second in the trilogy of projects 'Who Owns the Sea?' has in its early stages of research been informed and influenced by the territorial waters surrounding Gibraltar a politically contested British Overseas Territory located at the southernmost tip of the Iberian Peninsula. A highly c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Naldi, Pat
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/16860/
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https://sensingsite.blogspot.com/p/composting-estate-series-of-seminars.html
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Summary:The second in the trilogy of projects 'Who Owns the Sea?' has in its early stages of research been informed and influenced by the territorial waters surrounding Gibraltar a politically contested British Overseas Territory located at the southernmost tip of the Iberian Peninsula. A highly contested stretch of sea since the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, and a near daily site of military, and police incursions resulting in political bickering, these waters are continuously shrinking due to the land reclamation undertaken by both Gibraltar and Algeciras in Spain. Future research and production of a strand of 'Who Owns the Sea?' will be sited on the Arctic Ocean. Acting as ground zero in climate change, the focus of the research will question, explore and address the critical environmental, political, and human impact of sea ownership as experienced through the decreasing Arctic sea ice cap, and its effect on ecosystems, weather patterns, and territorial waters. The Arctic sea ice cover which helps determine the Earth’s climate, fell to its second lowest level in 2019. Humanity is dependent on the ocean and cryosphere. It interconnects with the climate system through water, energy, and carbon. The impact of this melting ice cover is also political, military, and most of all economic as several nations vie for ownership and control over its greater navigable waters – a new Northwest Passage – and the opportunities this will present. 'Who Owns the Sea?' will address these global implications through the local.