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The Legal Status of the Caspian Sea electronic resource Current Challenges and Prospects for Future Development / by Barbara Janusz-Pawletta.

By: Janusz-Pawletta, Barbara [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2015Description: XII, 176 p. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783662447307Subject(s): law | Energy policy | Energy and state | Environmental management | Law of the sea | International law | International Environmental Law | environmental law | Environmental policy | Environmental economics | Law | Law of the Sea, Air and Outer Space | International Environmental Law | Energy Policy, Economics and Management | Environmental Law/Policy/Ecojustice | Environmental Economics | Water Policy/Water Governance/Water ManagementDDC classification: 341.4 | 341 LOC classification: KZA1002-5205KZD1002-6715Online resources: Click here to access online In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book analyzes the legal and economic situation concerning the removal and allocation of the natural resources in the Caspian Sea – the largest enclosed body of salt water in the world, which not only constitutes a fragile ecosystem with great fishery resources, but is also rich in oil and gas deposits. The economic advantages gained from the development of oil and gas are the basis for the economic and social development of the riparian states, but also cause significant transboundary harm to the ecosystem of the Caspian Sea. The book contends that, if the local environment grows more heavily contaminated through the extraction of mineral resources, it could lead to environmentally induced violence. It describes the ongoing conflicts, which are primarily due to various riparian states’ territorial claims concerning the extraction of oil and gas resources, and argues that the current legal framework on the use and protection of the Caspian Sea is obsolete. Thus, the main objective of the book is to point out corresponding international legal mechanisms that could be used in order to settle these disputes and protect the Caspian Sea’s fragile environment from transboundary harm.
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This book analyzes the legal and economic situation concerning the removal and allocation of the natural resources in the Caspian Sea – the largest enclosed body of salt water in the world, which not only constitutes a fragile ecosystem with great fishery resources, but is also rich in oil and gas deposits. The economic advantages gained from the development of oil and gas are the basis for the economic and social development of the riparian states, but also cause significant transboundary harm to the ecosystem of the Caspian Sea. The book contends that, if the local environment grows more heavily contaminated through the extraction of mineral resources, it could lead to environmentally induced violence. It describes the ongoing conflicts, which are primarily due to various riparian states’ territorial claims concerning the extraction of oil and gas resources, and argues that the current legal framework on the use and protection of the Caspian Sea is obsolete. Thus, the main objective of the book is to point out corresponding international legal mechanisms that could be used in order to settle these disputes and protect the Caspian Sea’s fragile environment from transboundary harm.

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