E-Book, Englisch, 489 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Springer Polar Sciences
Pongrácz / Pavlov / Hänninen Arctic Marine Sustainability
1. Auflage 2020
ISBN: 978-3-030-28404-6
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Arctic Maritime Businesses and the Resilience of the Marine Environment
E-Book, Englisch, 489 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Springer Polar Sciences
ISBN: 978-3-030-28404-6
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Part 1 – ARCTIC ECOSYSTEMS AND SUSTAINABILITY. Chapter 1 – Sustainability in an Arctic context: Resilience of the Arctic marine environment( Eva Pongrácz).- Chapter 2 – Thinking like an ocean: A climate ethic for the Arctic marine environment ( Øyvind Stokke).- Chapter 3 - Arctic marine ecosystems, climate change impacts, and governance responses: an integrated perspective from the Barents Sea ( Stefan Koenigstein).- Chapter 4 – Oil vulnerability index, impact on Arctic bird populations (Proposing a method for calculating an oil vulnerability index for the Arctic Seabirds) ( Nina J. O’Hanlon, Alexander L. Bond, Neil A. James and Elizabeth A. Masden).- Chapter 5 – Conflicts between Arctic industries and cetaceans ( Charla Barsan and Marianne. H. Rasmussen).- Part 2 – Transport infrastructure. Chapter 6 – Social responsibility practice of the evolving nature in the sustainable development of Arctic maritime operations ( Antonina Tsvetkova).- Chapter 7– Miles and meters matter: political effects on the shipping routes of measurement techniques in the Arctic ( Eda Ayaydin).- Chapter 8 – Black carbon, maritime traffic and the Arctic ( Tommi Inkinen, Olli-Pekka Brunila, Esa Hämäläinen, Vappu Kunnaala-Hyrkki and Katariina Ala-Rämi).- Chapter 9 – Impact of the Potential Implementation of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles on the Northern Sea Route Safety Monitoring ( Nikita Kuprikov, Mihail Kuprikov, Maxim Shishaev, Maxim Polishchuk).- Part 3 – oil and gas. Chapter 10 – Handling the preparedness challenges for maritime and offshore operations in Arctic waters ( Kay Fjortoft and Tor Einar Berg).- Chapter 11 – Arctic oil spill response technologies: challenges and limitations ( Victor Pavlov).- Chapter 12 – The role of supply vessels in the development of offshore field projects in Arctic waters ( Antonina Tsvetkova).- Chapter 13 – Special rules for the Arctic? The analysis of Arctic-specific safety and environmental regulation of offshore petroleum development in the Arctic Ocean States ( Daria Shapovalova).- Part 4 – LOCAL communities. Chapter 14 – Increasing shipping in the Arctic and local communities’ engagement: A case from Longyearbyen on Svalbard ( Julia Olsen, Grete Kaare Hovelsrud and Bjørn Petter Kaltenborn).- Chapter 15 – Arctic search and rescue: A case study for understanding issues related to training and human factors when working in the North ( Derek. D. Rogers, Michael King and Heather Carnahan).- Chapter 16 – The possibilities and limitations of tourism development in Greenland to contribute to personal socio-economic wellbeing for coastal communities: ( Vishakha Tay).- Chapter 17 – Marine tourism development in the Arkhangelsk region, Russian Arctic: Stakeholder’s perspectives: (Julia Olsen, Marina Nenasheva, Karin Andrea Wigger, Albina Pashkevich, Sonja H. Bickford and Tatiana Maksimova).- Chapter 18 – Finnish Sami: Is tourism a preservation of indigenous culture? ( Samim Akgönül, and Eda Ayaydin).- Part 5 – sustainable governance. Chapter 19 – Regulation of cargo shipping on the Northern Sea Route: a strategic compliance in pursuing Arctic safety and commercial considerations: ( Antonina Tsvetkova).- Chapter 20 – Resource use conflicts in Arctic waters: A legal perspective: (Amber Rose Maggio).- Chapter 21 – Red dragon enters the waters of the High North: The making of China-Arctic shipping corridor : (Liisa Kauppila and Tuomas Kiiski).