In this article, we track a relatively new term in global environmental governance: “blue economy. ” Analyzing preparatory documentation and data collected at the 2012 UN Conference on Sustainable Development (i.e., Rioþ 20), we show how the term entered into use and how it was articulated within four competing dis-courses regarding human–ocean relations: (a) oceans as natural capital, (b) oceans as good business, (c) oceans as integral to Pacific Small Island Developing States, and (d) oceans as small-scale fisheries livelihoods. Blue economy was consistently invoked to connect oceans with Rioþ 20’s “green economy ” theme; however, different actors worked to further define the term in ways that prioritized particular oceans problems, solut...
As evidenced by Goal No. 14 of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, the importance of oceans go...
The global rush to develop the ‘blue economy’ risks harming both the marine environment and human we...
International audienceThe way we manage our global ocean economy continues to evolve. While new rese...
In this article, we track a relatively new term in global environmental governance: “blue economy. ”...
The growing relevance of the seas and the ocean in terms of economic, geopolitical and governance is...
Oceans cover approximately 71 percent of our planet’s surface. They provide food and livelihood to t...
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. The ‘Blue Economy’ is an incre...
A “blue economy” seeks to establish socially equitable, environmentally sustainable, and economicall...
Reflections on the ‘Towards an Inclusive Blue Economy’ conference organized by the International Ins...
This article examines the wide acceptance and endorsement of the notion of the blue economy. It plac...
In the 2010s, the Blue Economy' has been widely advocated by a spectrum of interests as a strategy t...
Billions of people in Asia and the Pacific depend on healthy oceans for their livelihoods, food secu...
The world’s ocean is the world’s life support. Many human activities have defined a negative relatio...
While welcoming the intervention of Winders and Le Heron as opening up a space for critical – and pr...
The blue economy has become an influential concept in international and national marine governance d...
As evidenced by Goal No. 14 of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, the importance of oceans go...
The global rush to develop the ‘blue economy’ risks harming both the marine environment and human we...
International audienceThe way we manage our global ocean economy continues to evolve. While new rese...
In this article, we track a relatively new term in global environmental governance: “blue economy. ”...
The growing relevance of the seas and the ocean in terms of economic, geopolitical and governance is...
Oceans cover approximately 71 percent of our planet’s surface. They provide food and livelihood to t...
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. The ‘Blue Economy’ is an incre...
A “blue economy” seeks to establish socially equitable, environmentally sustainable, and economicall...
Reflections on the ‘Towards an Inclusive Blue Economy’ conference organized by the International Ins...
This article examines the wide acceptance and endorsement of the notion of the blue economy. It plac...
In the 2010s, the Blue Economy' has been widely advocated by a spectrum of interests as a strategy t...
Billions of people in Asia and the Pacific depend on healthy oceans for their livelihoods, food secu...
The world’s ocean is the world’s life support. Many human activities have defined a negative relatio...
While welcoming the intervention of Winders and Le Heron as opening up a space for critical – and pr...
The blue economy has become an influential concept in international and national marine governance d...
As evidenced by Goal No. 14 of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, the importance of oceans go...
The global rush to develop the ‘blue economy’ risks harming both the marine environment and human we...
International audienceThe way we manage our global ocean economy continues to evolve. While new rese...