Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576

'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda' represents an extremely comprehensive and well-written overview of Australia's activities and agenda in the Antarctic region since 1933. In that year, Australia laid claim to 42% of the Antarctic continent, a continent that represent...

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Main Authors: Taylor, Neil, School of Education, orcid:0000-0001-8438-319X
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Australian Association for Environmental Education 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/3227
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spelling ftunivnewengland:oai:rune.une.edu.au:1959.11/3227 2023-08-27T04:05:54+02:00 Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576 Taylor, Neil School of Education orcid:0000-0001-8438-319X 2008 https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/3227 en eng Australian Association for Environmental Education https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/3227 une:3314 http://www.aaee.org.au/publications/ajee.htm http://books.google.com.au/books?id=QdTnr0lLGOQC Environmental Sciences Review 2008 ftunivnewengland 2023-08-10T18:43:04Z 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda' represents an extremely comprehensive and well-written overview of Australia's activities and agenda in the Antarctic region since 1933. In that year, Australia laid claim to 42% of the Antarctic continent, a continent that represents 8% of the total landmass of the planet. Furthermore, Australia has a claim over a number of sub Antarctic islands (Macquarie, Head and the McDonald Island) each with significant biodiversity and rich offshore fishing grounds. It is, therefore, not surprising that Australia is an active member of the Antarctic Treaty System. As the book's authors point out, advances in technology now allow humans to reside all year round on the continent. Furthermore, there is increasing interest in exploiting the various resources that the Antarctic continent has to offer, and a significant level of illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing activities all of which put the fragile ecosystem of the continent under increasing pressure. Unfortunately, as Professor Stuart Harris points out in his foreword to this text, there is limited public understanding of Australia's interests and role in the Antarctic, a major concern for those closely associated with the continent. However, this excellent book offers one way to raise public awareness of Australia's agenda in the Antarctic and the complexities of dealing with a remote continent with vast resource potential administered by multiple sovereign states. Review Antarc* Antarctic Research UNE - University of New England at Armidale, NSW Australia Antarctic McDonald Island ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.050,-53.050) The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Research UNE - University of New England at Armidale, NSW Australia
op_collection_id ftunivnewengland
language English
topic Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences
Taylor, Neil
School of Education
orcid:0000-0001-8438-319X
Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576
topic_facet Environmental Sciences
description 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda' represents an extremely comprehensive and well-written overview of Australia's activities and agenda in the Antarctic region since 1933. In that year, Australia laid claim to 42% of the Antarctic continent, a continent that represents 8% of the total landmass of the planet. Furthermore, Australia has a claim over a number of sub Antarctic islands (Macquarie, Head and the McDonald Island) each with significant biodiversity and rich offshore fishing grounds. It is, therefore, not surprising that Australia is an active member of the Antarctic Treaty System. As the book's authors point out, advances in technology now allow humans to reside all year round on the continent. Furthermore, there is increasing interest in exploiting the various resources that the Antarctic continent has to offer, and a significant level of illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing activities all of which put the fragile ecosystem of the continent under increasing pressure. Unfortunately, as Professor Stuart Harris points out in his foreword to this text, there is limited public understanding of Australia's interests and role in the Antarctic, a major concern for those closely associated with the continent. However, this excellent book offers one way to raise public awareness of Australia's agenda in the Antarctic and the complexities of dealing with a remote continent with vast resource potential administered by multiple sovereign states.
format Review
author Taylor, Neil
School of Education
orcid:0000-0001-8438-319X
author_facet Taylor, Neil
School of Education
orcid:0000-0001-8438-319X
author_sort Taylor, Neil
title Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576
title_short Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576
title_full Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576
title_fullStr Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576
title_full_unstemmed Review of 'Looking South - Australia's Antarctic Agenda': Edited by Lorne K Kriwoken, Julia Jabour and Alan It Hemmings. Annandale, New South Wales: The Federation Press, November 2007, 227 pp. ISBN: 9781862876576
title_sort review of 'looking south - australia's antarctic agenda': edited by lorne k kriwoken, julia jabour and alan it hemmings. annandale, new south wales: the federation press, november 2007, 227 pp. isbn: 9781862876576
publisher Australian Association for Environmental Education
publishDate 2008
url https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/3227
long_lat ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.050,-53.050)
geographic Antarctic
McDonald Island
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
McDonald Island
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source http://www.aaee.org.au/publications/ajee.htm
http://books.google.com.au/books?id=QdTnr0lLGOQC
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/3227
une:3314
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