Oceans cover 70% of the planet’s surface and constitute the most important reserve in biodiversity. Although our knowledge of oceans remains incomplete, a global consensus has emerged regarding the need to preserve the marine biodiversity. However, the law keeps favouring the exploitation, sometimes irrational, of these natural resources, most notably for the purpose of genetic research. The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Convention on Biodiversity both reflect this very trend, and show how difficult it is to deal with the specificity of deep sea waters, on natural as well as legal grounds. Beyond these shortcomings, the two Conventions have nevertheless managed to gather most of the international community and to provoke a de...
International audienceThe global nature and acuteness of the threats to biodiversity create a pressi...
International audienceTransforming the ocean law by requirement of the marine environment conservati...
The huge variety of plants, animals and microbes, their genes and the landscapes that they build, al...
Over the last decades, the pressure on the environment of marine areas beyond the national jurisdict...
Le régime juridique relatif à la conservation de la biodiversité dans les zones maritimes internatio...
Knowledge of the marine environment beyond national jurisdiction and its unique biodiversity is stil...
Attention is increasingly being given to genetic resources in the deep seabed beyond the limits of n...
The sustainable conservation and use of biodiversity beyond maritime areas under national jurisdicti...
Life on earth, the climate, the air we breathe, the water we drink and the food we eat are to a larg...
Later this year, the international community will assemble in New York for the first of four Intergo...
International audienceUNCLOS itself does not constitute a sufficient legal instrument to ensure coor...
Delegations are in the final stages of negotiating the proposed Agreement under the United Nations C...
This paper seeks to question the prevailing orthodoxy on the need for the ‘package deal’ on the prop...
It is a known fact that 50 to 80% of biodiversity is found in the marine environment. Thus safeguar...
International audienceThe global nature and acuteness of the threats to biodiversity create a pressi...
International audienceTransforming the ocean law by requirement of the marine environment conservati...
The huge variety of plants, animals and microbes, their genes and the landscapes that they build, al...
Over the last decades, the pressure on the environment of marine areas beyond the national jurisdict...
Le régime juridique relatif à la conservation de la biodiversité dans les zones maritimes internatio...
Knowledge of the marine environment beyond national jurisdiction and its unique biodiversity is stil...
Attention is increasingly being given to genetic resources in the deep seabed beyond the limits of n...
The sustainable conservation and use of biodiversity beyond maritime areas under national jurisdicti...
Life on earth, the climate, the air we breathe, the water we drink and the food we eat are to a larg...
Later this year, the international community will assemble in New York for the first of four Intergo...
International audienceUNCLOS itself does not constitute a sufficient legal instrument to ensure coor...
Delegations are in the final stages of negotiating the proposed Agreement under the United Nations C...
This paper seeks to question the prevailing orthodoxy on the need for the ‘package deal’ on the prop...
It is a known fact that 50 to 80% of biodiversity is found in the marine environment. Thus safeguar...
International audienceThe global nature and acuteness of the threats to biodiversity create a pressi...
International audienceTransforming the ocean law by requirement of the marine environment conservati...
The huge variety of plants, animals and microbes, their genes and the landscapes that they build, al...