Friday, June 6, 2003
WRITER/CONTACT: Dorinda Dallmeyer, 706/542-514, dorindad@uga.edu
UGA HOSTS MARITIME SPECIALISTS FOR
INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE
ATHENS, Ga. - Earlier this week the independent Pew Oceans Commission
issued a comprehensive report calling for immediate reforms of U.S. ocean
laws and policies to restore ocean wildlife, protect ocean ecosystems and
preserve the ecological, economic and social benefits the oceans provide.
On June 13 and 14, ocean law and policy experts from around the globe will
meet at the University of Georgia's Dean Rusk Center-International,
Comparative and Graduate Legal Studies for a conference titled "International
Coastal Management: Tools for Successful Regional Partnerships and
Initiatives." The conference will offer participants the opportunity
for in-depth discussions on the impact of climate change and sea-level rise,
sustainable fishing and other challenges of coastal management. The
group will also examine case studies ranging from the Georgia coast to Panama
and Australia as models for successful stewardship of coastal resources.
"By its very nature, the ocean requires us to think more holistically about
its management, from the coastal zone to the high seas," said Dorinda Dallmeyer,
associate director of the Rusk Center and conference organizer. "Everyone,
whether a coastal resident or not, has a stake in the future of the oceans.
This is an exciting opportunity to bring together law and policy experts from
so many regions to learn about what works and what doesn't when it comes
to exercising sustainable stewardship of 70 percent of the planet."
This is the first conference sponsored by the newly established national
Sea Grant Law Center, based at the University of Mississippi School of Law.
The purpose of the SGLC is to integrate efforts of ocean and coastal law
research centers nationwide and provide outreach and advisory services to
the National Sea Grant College Program and its constituents. As a founding
collaborating partner in the SGLC, the Rusk Center's staff and students contribute
research on international law developments as they affect coastal and marine
resource management.
In addition to the Dean Rusk Center and the University of Mississippi, SGLC
collaborating institutions include the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric
Science at the University of Miami, the Ocean and Coastal Law Library at
the University of Oregon and the Nova Southeastern Law Center.
For the conference agenda or registration details, visit SGLC's Web site
at www.olemiss.edu/orgs/SGLC.
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