旧海新冰:海冰地球工程与北冰洋治理中的土著权利

Romain Chuffart, Aaron M. Cooper, Corine Wood-Donnelly, Laura Seddon
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摘要

ABSTRACT 这篇综合性论文探讨了北极海冰治理、地球工程和土著人民权利之间复杂的相互作用。它提出了一些关键问题,即在维护原住民权利的同时,对潜在的海冰地球工程计划进行监管的可行性。本文采用多学科方法,调查了关于北极海冰的各种观点,包括其在气候科学、国际法和北极原住民中的作用,为正在进行的关于在北极治理和新兴气候技术中落实原住民权利的讨论做出了贡献。由于气候干预正在成为可能的现实,本文强调必须将应对气候变化的海洋地球工程纳入全球海洋法律和治理,特别关注气候正义以及土著和当地社区积极参与决策。本文还利用资源开采的类比方法,探讨了将地球工程海冰视为一种资源的概念,并研究了有关资源开采的现有国际法律框架是否能促进土著权利的有效落实。本文认为,亟需制定一项海洋伦理内容,考虑地球工程背景下的原住民权利,并倡导以自然为中心的愿景、原住民主导的气候行动以及国际法律框架内的社区海洋资源管理,从而在基于权利的方法与新兴气候干预技术之间取得平衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Old Sea, New Ice: sea ice geoengineering and indigenous rights in Arctic Ocean governance
ABSTRACT This comprehensive paper explores the complex interplay between Arctic sea ice governance, geoengineering, and the rights of Indigenous peoples. It raises critical questions about the feasibility of regulating potential sea ice geoengineering initiatives while upholding Indigenous rights. Employing a multidisciplinary approach, the paper investigates diverse perspectives on Arctic sea ice encompassing its roles in climate science, international law, and for Arctic Indigenous peoples, contributing to ongoing discussions on implementing Indigenous rights within Arctic governance and emerging climate technologies. As climate interventions are becoming a likely reality, the paper emphasises the imperative of integrating marine geoengineering responses to climate change into global ocean law and governance, with a specific focus on climate justice and the active involvement of Indigenous and local communities in the decision-making. Using analogies of resource exploitation, this paper also explores whether the conceptualisation of geo-engineered sea ice as a resource and looking at existing international legal frameworks governing resource extraction could enhance the effective implementation of Indigenous rights. The paper contends that there is an urgent need to develop an oceanic ethics component that considers Indigenous rights in the context of geoengineering, and advocates for nature-centric visions, Indigenous-led climate actions, and community-level marine resource management within international legal frameworks to strike a balance between the rights-based approach and emerging climate intervention technologies.
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