CONTENTS OF VOLUME 3:2 (2000)
Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy
Main Articles
Helen Newing & Stuart Harrop
Abstract
The Brazil nut industry comports with the principal objectives of European policy on development co-operation (poverty reduction linked with environmental protection) and forest conservation (maintaining forest cover). However, European Regulation 1525-98 EC, which decreases acceptable levels of aflatoxins in Brazil nuts to 4 parts per billion, may cause a crash in the Brazil nut trade. Thus, European policies on food quality, development co-operation and forest conservation are likely to operate a cross-purposes. Brazil nut producer countries have questioned the legal basis of the Regulation in terms of scientific justification for the stricter limits on aflatoxin content and lack of conformity with international standards set by Codex Alimentarius. The EC has countered by invoking the precautionary principle. This article documents the debate in the context of the World Trade Organisation’s Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement and discusses the implications for the relationship between agendas of trade, environment and sustainable development.
Keywords
Brazil nuts; Codex Alimentarius; World Trade Organization Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement; European Community.
R.V. Anuradha
Abstract
The United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) concluded at the Earth Summit in 1992, mandates that where utilisation of the knowledge, innovations and practices of local and indigenous communities leads to benefits, such benefits shall be equitably shared with the holders of such knowledge, innovations and practices. The study analyses some of the issues that have emerged in the context of a ‘benefit sharing exercise’ attempted by the Tropical Botanic Garden and Research Institute (TBGRI), a research institute based in Kerala, with the Kani tribals of Kerala, pursuant to the development of a pharmaceutical drug, based on the knowledge, information and natural resources that the Kanis have nurtured over many years.
As the case study illustrates, the debate on benefit sharing in the absence of other fundamental rights such as the rights to land, access to the resource and adequate governance structures becomes a limited and myopic exercise. A ‘fair and equitable benefit sharing mechanism’ would therefore call for certain basic pre-conditions that will be discussed in the course of the study.
Comments
Klaus Riede
Abstract
The present paper reviews the state of knowledge of migratory species protected under the Bonn Convention (Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals) and presents first results from the “Global Register of Migratory Species” (GROMS). GROMS summarises our knowledge on migratory species within one relational database in combination with a geographical information system (GIS). GROMS will reveal information deficiencies, support the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, and contribute to the Clearinghouse Mechanism under the Convention on Biological Diversity. At present, GROMS contains 412 species distribution maps in GIS format. As an initial example of the potential of GIS-analysis, GIS-maps of birds and mammals were intersected with administrative borders, and the number of species was calculated for each province. The resulting map shows a high diversity in temperate regions, which is in contrast to maps that usually show most "biodiversity hotspots" to be in the tropics. Consequences for conservation policies are discussed and future prospects for GIS analysis are outlined.
Keywords
Biodiversity informatics, migratory species, Geographical Information Systems, databases, Bonn Convention; Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals.
Vasant K. Saberwal
Keywords
India; protected areas
Documents
52nd Meeting of the International Whaling Commission
Conservation and Management of Marine Turtles and Their Habitats of the Indian Ocean and South-East Area
Council Session, Council of the Commission for Environmental Cooperation, Statement on Biodiversity
Guidelines for Authors