
In The Greening Of Antarctica Alessandro Antonello Investigates The Development Of An International Regime Of Environmental Protection And Management Between The Signing Of The Antarctic Treaty In 1959 And The Signing Of The Convention On The Conservation Of Antarctic Marine Living Resources In 1980. In Those Two Decades, The Antarctic Treaty Parties And An International Community Of Scientists Reimagined What Many Considered A Cold, Sterile, And Abiotic Wilderness As A Fragile And Extensive Regional Ecosystem. Antonello Investigates This Change By Analyzing The Negotiations And Developments Surrounding Four Environmental Agreements: The Agreed Measures For The Conservation Of Antarctic Fauna And Flora In 1964; The Convention For The Conservation Of Antarctic Seals In 1972; A Voluntary Restraint Resolution On Antarctic Mining In 1977; And The Convention On The Conservation Of Antarctic Marine Living Resources In 1980. Though Distant From World Populations, Antarctica Has Long Been A Site Of Inter-state Contest For Geopolitical Power And Standing. This Book Reveals How A Range Of Contests, Geopolitical, Epistemic And Imaginative, Created The Environmental Protection Regime Of The Antarctic Treaty System, And Discusses The Tension Between States' Individual Searches For Power And The Collective Desire For Stability In The Region. In This International And Diplomatic Context, The Actors Were Not Only Trying To Keep Relations Between Themselves Orderly, But They Were Also Using Treaties To Order The Human Relationship With The Environment. Drawing On A Wide Range Of International Archives, Many Newly-opened, The Greening Of Antarctica Offers The First Detailed Narrative Of A Crucial Period In Antarctic History And Reveals The Contours Of Global Environmental Thought And Diplomacy In The Transformative Age Of Ecology.
How did the perception of Antarctica shift from a sterile, abiotic wilderness to a fragile, protected ecosystem between 1959 and 1980? Alessandro Antonello, a historian specializing in environmental and Antarctic studies, examines the diplomatic and scientific evolution of the Antarctic Treaty System. By analyzing newly opened international archives, he argues that the environmental protection regime was not merely a scientific endeavor but a complex result of geopolitical maneuvering and shifting global ecological thought.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of Cold War diplomacy and environmental governance. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous, archival-based account of a pivotal era in international law.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190907185
ISBN-13:
9780190907181
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