Marine World Heritage and the Quest for Sustainability
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Marine World Heritage: An Evolving Concept
3. The World Heritage Regime and Its Impact on Marine Sustainability
- the concept of needs, in particular the essential needs of the world’s poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and
- the idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology and social organization on the environment’s ability to meet present and future needs.” ([7], p. 47)
3.1. The Environmental Dimension7
Criterion vii connects outstanding universal value to the existence of superlative natural phenomena to areas of exceptional natural beauty and aesthetic importance or both. According to UNESCO’s Resource Manual ([15], p. 40), the attribute of superlative natural phenomena can be “objectively measured and assessed”. Extensive linear reef complexes, such as the Great Barrier Reef in Australia8, the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System9, or the existence of steep walls and cavings, as in the case of the Malpelo Fauna and Flora Sanctuary in Colombia10, constitute illustrative examples. Another feature falling into this category is the aggregation of living resources (e.g., sharks, mammals or turtles). On the other hand, exceptional natural beauty and aesthetic importance is based on qualitative criteria, often lacking the objective character of quantified assessment ([1], p. 73; [15], p. 40; [16], p. 10). Although the appreciation of the scenic quality of a marine area does involve a degree of subjectivity, since it is not founded on measurable data, it can hardly be doubted in the cases of World Heritage nominations. First of all, there is no marine nomination based solely on criterion vii (in line with IUCN’s recommendations on the application of criterion vii in conjunction with other criteria)11. Secondly, reference to marine aesthetic values is linked to the existence of exceptional natural or biological phenomena, such as coral reefs, island agglomerations or icescapes ([6], p. 25), and thus indirectly connected to measurable attributes. What is important though is that reference to natural beauty contributes to a broader understanding of the natural environment and the construction of environmental values of a “non-service” character. According to the International Law Commission, “[e]nvironment could be defined in a restricted way, limiting it exclusively to natural resources, such as air, soil, water, fauna and flora, and their interaction. A broader definition could embrace environmental values also. The Commission has opted to include in the definition the latter encompassing non-service values such as aesthetic aspects of the landscape also. This includes the enjoyment of nature because of its natural beauty and its recreational attributes and opportunities associated with it” ([18], p. 133). Apart from the broad conceptual perception of the environmental qualities, the Convention system has adopted a comprehensive approach vis à vis the interpretation of the integrity condition in conjunction with the natural beauty criterion. The WH Committee clarified that the proposed properties for their scenic beauty should incorporate the broader area “linked to the maintenance of the aesthetic qualities” ([4], para. 92). Thus, host states should expand their protection schemes in order to ensure that the ecological processes that support the scenic qualities of a property are sustained.Criterion viii applied on the marine environment is interpreted as outstanding examples ([6], pp. 10–16) of (a) marine geology, including plates and tectonic features, hotspots and seamounts, sedimentary processes, and hydrogeological features (such as vents or seeps); and (b) oceanography, including ocean currents, water masses and stratification. In terms of the chemical composition of marine water, there is a basic division of marine areas in terms of the proximity to the coast and a vertical classification of ocean space relating to the ability to absorb light depending on the depth, waves and other fluid phenomena such as tides, coastal and land-sea interactions, and marine ice processes and features. Thus, applying criterion viii to marine World Heritage nominations includes outstanding examples representing major stages of the earth’s history (such as the case of the Galápagos islands in Ecuador that constitute demonstration of “the evolution of the younger volcanic areas in the west and the older islands in the east”)12, including the record of life (as in the Great Barrier Reef, an “ecosystem that has evolved over millennia” [3]), significant on-going geological processes in the development of landforms, or significant geomorphic or physiographic features (such as the Heard and MacDonald Island13 or the Papahānaumokuākea in the United States14, which represent an island hotspot progression). In order to meet the integrity condition, States’ nominations under this criterion should incorporate “all or most of the key interrelated and interdependent elements in [the] natural relationships” ([4], para. 93), ensuring the sustainability of the above mentioned on-going or historical processes.Criterion ix is the only criterion that explicitly mentions marine systems. The wording of this criterion was often combined or even confused with criterion (x). According to IUCN “criterion ix relates to ecosystems, communities and the ecological and biological processes that shape and sustain them, while criterion x relates to species and the habitats or sites most important for their conservation” ([6], p. 17). It encompasses ([6], pp. 18–21) productivity and biochemical cycles (e.g., the Islands and Protected Areas of the Gulf of California, which constitute a unique habitat consisting of ‘bridge’ and oceanic islands, and which combined with the oceanographic conditions and processes to enhance marine productivity and biodiversity conservation in the area)15; connectivity of marine areas (in relation to species migration) (the transboundary nomination of Kluane/Wrangell-St. Elias/Glacier Bay/Tatshenshini-Alsek situated in Alaska and North Western Canada, which assists the spawning of anadromous fish, linking marine and land conservation)16; and marine ecosystem patterns, processes and services (the case of the Heard and MacDonald Island is illustrative due to the intact ecosystem from the point of view of alien species and human impact [3]). In the case of the implementation of the integrity criterion in properties proposed for nomination under criterion ix, host States should ensure that the size of the site is sufficient to preserve the ecosystem and biodiversity features they support. In the case of marine sites, the WH Committee provides the example of coral reef areas that “should include […] seagrass, mangrove or other adjacent ecosystems that regulate nutrient and sediment inputs into the reef” ([4], para. 94).Criterion x provides for conservation of marine biological diversity in situ, focusing on species that are threatened, through the protection of their habitats. In this case, the integrity criterion links once again the spatial dimension of marine conservation with biodiversity; the WH Committee provides the following examples to be applied in marine sites: “…an island ecosystem should include habitats for maintaining endemic biota; a property containing wide ranging species should be large enough to include the most critical habitats essential to ensure the survival of viable populations of those species; for an area containing migratory species, seasonal breeding and nesting sites, and migratory routes, wherever they are located, should be adequately protected” ([4], para. 95). The case of the bird communities in the Gough and Inaccessible Islands in the South Atlantic Ocean17 or in the Banc d’Arguin National Park18 constitute illustrative examples of World Heritage Convention’s marine sites contribution to biodiversity sustainability.
3.2. The Economic Dimension
3.3. The Social-Institutional Dimension
- (a)
- the synchronic dimension: Marine heritage is conceived as a vital resource for the members of the present generation. First of all, the 1972 UNESCO Convention’s mechanism aims at a more representative marine sites inventory ([6], p. 1; [39]) in terms of regional ecosystems representation. Intragenerational equity, however, is not interpreted solely as the balanced representation of marine sites inscribed in the World Heritage List, but also as equal rights over a healthy marine environment (and its implications for living conditions as well as development prospects) locally as well as globally.
- (b)
- the diachronic dimension: Article 4 of the 1972 Convention recognizes “the duty of ensuring the identification, conservation, presentation and transmission to future generations of the [world] cultural and natural heritage situated on their territory”, linking World Heritage protection with the concept of intergenerational equity and different generations’ rights over the marine resources. In order to meet this primordial obligation to preserve the qualitative characteristics of human environment in order not to impair the quantity or quality of the natural assets to be enjoyed or used by future generations ([40]; [41], pp. 398–99) states should develop their legislation in order to implement this “duty to ensure the transmission of heritage” ([42], p. 115).
- (a)
- regulation and management at the national level: States have to develop appropriate legislation and administrative structures as well as comprehensive management programs; the nomination process is a laborious venture since nomination files are examined not only on the basis of their exceptional value according to the criteria analyzed above but also in terms of the legislative measures and the quality of the management plans applied in the area as well as the ability of the competent authorities and the local communities to implement them. Once inscribed in the World Heritage List, marine sites are regularly assessed in order to ensure that the outstanding universal value and the integrity of the sites at the time of inscription “are sustained or enhanced” ([4], para. 96). The assessment is realized through the reactive40 and the periodic41 reporting systems including in situ assessments realized by experts42 and competent authorities may take additional or corrective measures where needed43.
- (b)
- depolitization of the decision-making processes due to the enhanced role of independent experts, both in the nomination and the monitoring processes. In the case of marine properties, IUCN is the advisory body that assists the World Heritage Committee ([49], p. 188) while ICOMOS provides its expertise for the marine mixed sites inscribed on the List. Although IUCN and ICOMOS’ contribution is purely advisory, in line with article 8 of the Convention, in practice, their opinion is decisive due to the complex methodology required considering the implementation of the Convention’s criteria (see above), the diversity of the protected sites as well as the evolution of science itself. Additionally, it is mainly experts from these organizations that will undertake in situ fact-finding and monitoring missions ([50], p. 427), offer expertise and technical guidance to competent authorities and deliberate with local stakeholders in case further or corrective measures are needed44. Thus, the Advisory Bodies lend the system with scientific objectiveness, creating confidence between states parties and render the processes of nomination and monitoring less susceptible to political claims.
- (c)
- introduction of a flexible system of soft-law rules that states cannot deviate from ([51], p. 1849): The Operational Guidelines for the implementation of the Convention are revised regularly45, keeping the Convention in pace with new challenges, whilst contributing to the uniformity among states parties’ perception of (marine) World Heritage and conservation measures. The ad hoc technical support provided by the Convention’s mechanism and the establishment of the World Heritage Marine Programme in 2005 [3] to support states with the nomination and conservation processes of marine properties constitute the main policy tools supporting uniformity and innovation in the World Heritage system. This is evident in the introduction of novel concepts of environmental protection such as the ecosystem-based approach46 and marine spatial planning47 ([17], p. 32) (the latter initially introduced as a management process for the conservation of a marine World Heritage site, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef) [57,58].
- (d)
- introduction (although tempered by the primacy of the host states) of a system of shared responsibility for the implementation of all the processes that would ensure the inscribed sites sustainability. According to the Convention primary responsibility for “the identification, protection, conservation, presentation and transmission to future generations of the cultural and natural heritage...situated in their territory,” belongs to the host state. However, the Convention introduces the obligation of the international community to cooperate for the protection of world heritage by providing assistance to the host state once requested as well as by applying the due diligence principle [59] by abstaining from taking any measures that would cause damage to the heritage, situated in the territory of another state (Article 6). Additionally, while all decisions require the consent of the host state, the World Heritage Committee may “at any time, in case of urgent need,” inscribe a property in the List of World Heritage in Danger (article 11, para. 4); in the same context, although not explicitly mentioned in the Convention48, the World Heritage Committee decides on the delisting of properties from the List [60]. Last but not least, the Convention establishes a mechanism of international cooperation and assistance, including both financial as well as operational support once requested.
3.4. The Cultural Dimension
4. The World Heritage Convention and Its Impact on Non-Designated Sites
4.1. Marine Areas under National Jurisdiction
4.2. Synergies with the High Seas Regime
5. Marine World Heritage and the Sustainable Development Goals: The Road Ahead
6. Concluding Remarks
- (a)
- The comprehensive approach vis à vis the marine space in terms of its ecological and social features as well as the cultural values (tangible and intangible) attached to the latter.
- (b)
- The combination of environmental conservation to economic sustainability of local communities, national economies and marine management cost.
- (c)
- The creation of a global consciousness on the value of these exceptional sites. The nomination of transboundary marine properties or the cooperation of marine World Heritage sites managers as well as the ongoing debate on the future of areas of universal value in the high seas reflect a shift from the conventional intergovernmental logic to a novel perception of marine environmental concerns.
- (d)
- The ability of the Convention’s system to promote a uniform approach on behalf of national authorities in terms of protection measures and management as well as to mainstream new trends and principles in environmental protection. The concept of outstanding universal value is constantly evolving, along with the natural criteria set by the Committee for its attribution to natural sites, and the horizontal criterion for integrity.
- (e)
- The dissemination of sound and state of the art management techniques through capacity building assistance programs that enhance the ability of national and local authorities to cope with marine environmental conservation not confined in World Heritage sites but also in other marine areas.
- (f)
- The creation of multilevel partnerships encompassing the adoption of participatory models of decision-making through the involvement of local stakeholders in the process of World Heritage conservation, as well as the provision of expertise from international advisory bodies.
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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- 1Article 2 defines natural heritage as “(1) natural features consisting of physical and biological formations or groups of such formations, which are of outstanding universal value from the aesthetic or scientific point of view; (2) geological and physiographical formations and precisely delineated areas which constitute the habitat of threatened species of animals and plants of outstanding universal value from the point of view of science or conservation; (3) natural sites or precisely delineated areas of outstanding universal value from the point of view of science, conservation or natural beauty.”
- 2According to the first Operational Guidelines adopted in 1977, outstanding universal value will be recognized in sites fulfilling four criteria, one of them (criterion (ii)) making explicit reference to the marine environment, according to which nominated properties should “be outstanding examples representing significant ongoing geological processes, biological evolution and man’s interaction with its natural environment. As distinct from the periods of the earth’s development [mentioned in criterion (i)], this focuses upon ongoing processes in the development of plants and animals, landforms and marine and freshwater bodies. This category would include for example (a) as geological processes, glaciation and volcanism; (b) as biological evolution, examples of biomes such as tropical rainforests, deserts and tundra; (c) as interaction between man and his natural environment, terraced agricultural landscapes.”
- 3As of October 2015, only four out of forty-seven marine properties of the World Heritage List are inscribed as mixed sites: the volcanic archipelago of St Kilda in the United Kingdom (1986) according to criteria (iii), (v), (vii), (ix) and (x); Ibiza, Biodiversity and Culture in Spain (1999) according to criteria (ii), (iii), (iv), (ix) and (x); the Papahānaumokuākea in the Hawaiian archipelago in USA inscribed in 2010 according to criteria (iii), (vi), (viii), (ix) and (x); and the Rock Islands Southern Lagoon in Palau (2012) according to criteria (iii), (v), (vii), (ix) and (x). See [3].
- 4A term used by the experts participating in the workshop on the World Heritage Marine Biodiversity in 2002 ([5], pp. 6, 17). The World Heritage Marine Biodiversity Workshop: Filling Critical Gaps and Promoting Multi-Site Approaches to New Nominations of Tropical Coastal, Marine and Small Island Ecosystems” was held in Hanoi, Vietnam from 25 February to 1 March 2002 on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention.
- 5According to the definition provided in the Hanoi Workshop, a serial nomination “consists of two or more physically unconnected areas, but which are related for example because they belong to the same geological, geomorphological formation, the same biogeographic province or the same ecosystem type. The series itself should be of outstanding universal value, not necessarily its components taken individually. Serial nominations are inscribed as a single property on the World Heritage List.” ([5], p. 12).
- 6In this context, the “prism of sustainable development” perception was introduced. The latter expands the conventional sustainability triangle based on the three-pillar scheme of environmental, social and economic dimensions of sustainability by adding the institutional dimension, as presented in ([12], pp. 380, 382).
- 7Based on the perception of environmental sustainability within the context of ecological economics provided by Daly [14], an advocate of the precautionary approach in relation to the use of natural resources. Daly has proposed three basic principles relating to yield sustainability in terms of renewable resources, to the bearing capacity of the environment in relation to waste disposal, whether regular or accidental, and to the balanced replacement of non-renewable stocks depleted with alternative renewable resources.
- 8Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1981 under the criteria (vii), (viii), (ix) and (x), the Great Barrier Reef is “the world’s most extensive coral reef ecosystem…covering an area of 348,000 square kilometers and extending across a contiguous latitudinal range of 14o (10oS to 24oS)” [3].
- 9Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1996 under the criteria (vii), (ix) and (x), the Belize Barrier Reserve System constitutes the largest reef complex in the Atlantic-Caribbean region and the second largest reef system in the world [3].
- 10Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 2006 under the criteria (vii) and (ix) [3].
- 11Criterion vii was present in almost in all nominations until 1995 (with the Sundarbans National Park, Banc d’Arguin National Park and the Whale Sanctuary of El Vizcaino being the only exceptions), but its use has been significantly limited during the last two decades ([17], p. 64).
- 12Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 2001 under the criteria (vii), (viii), (ix) and (x) [3].
- 13Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1997 under the criteria (viii) and (ix) by Australia, these sub-Antarctic volcanic islands constitute an example of continuing geological processes that “provide an understanding of the role of crustal plates in the formation of ocean basins and continents, and of atmospheric and oceanic warming” [3].
- 14Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 2010 under the criteria (iii), (vi), (viii), (ix) and (x) [3].
- 15Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 2005 (with minor modifications in 2007 and 2011) by Mexico under the criteria (vii), (ix) and (x) [3].
- 16Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1979 under the criteria (vii), (viii), (ix) and (x) [3].
- 17Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1995 (extended in 2004) be Great Britain under the criteria (vii) and (x) [3].
- 18Inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1989 by Mauritania under the criteria (ix) and (x) [3].
- 19Sustainable development constitutes a priority of World Heritage Goal 3: Heritage protection and conservation considers present and future environmental, societal and economic needs ([20], p. 13).
- 20In some World Heritage properties fishing is prohibited. This is the case with Tubbabataha Reefs in Philippines, a marine site inscribed in World Heritage List in 1993 (extended in 2009) under the criteria (vii), (ix) and (x) [3]. Economic activity is restricted to tourism and recreation; it is estimated, however, that protection measures regarding fisheries in this area have increased fishing capacities in marine areas nearby ([23], p. 38). In some other areas, regulated fisheries is provided for local populations promoting sustainability of fishing stocks and subsequently the income generated by catches. A project implemented in the Sian Ka’an World Heritage site in Mexico, enlisted in 1987 under the criteria (vii) and (x) [3], assisted local fishermen to change their fishing techniques and gradually abandon the use of nets by taking advantage of existing scientific knowledge, biodiversity mapping of the area and systematic recording of their catches. The change of fishing attitudes resulted in a 30% increase of local income generated from lobster catches ([19], p. 74).
- 21The profession of boat operator that transfer visitors to the marine properties’ is very popular in World Heritage marine sites, especially where other economic activities, as fisheries in the case of the Tubbabataha Reefs site mentioned above ([23], p. 38), are excluded. The case of the Green Fjords initiative in the West Norwegian Fjords—Geirangerfjord and Nærøyfjord in Norway, a site inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2005 under the criteria (vii) and (viii) [3], constitutes an alternative model for maritime transport operations within World Heritage sites. Site managers have developed a partnership with the private sector of boat operators ensuring that only the boats that would leave no “footprint” on the site’s environment would have access in the area ([19], p. 84).
- 22Tourism constitutes the economic activity that has been mostly studied in the case of World Heritage sites. Several studies have been conducted focusing on different dimensions of tourism for the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System, the Great Barrier Reef, the Peninsula Valdes, the Galapagos islands ([23], pp. 32–33), while EU has sponsored a project in the Wadden Sea area for the elaboration of a regional sustainable tourism strategy and enhance socio-economic development [24] in the Dutch-German-Danish Wadden Sea region, inscribed as a transboundary property in the World Heritage List in 2009 (extended in 2014) under the criteria (viii), (ix) and (x) [3].
- 23In the case of the Sian Ka’an World Heritage site, artisanal spiny lobster fisheries have been awarded the Marine Stewardship Council certification, creating opportunities for access in the international markets as eco-labeled products ([19], p. 74). A broader strategy has been adopted in the Wadden Sea area (see above) in relation to the comprehensive branding and marketing of the area’s outstanding universal values ([19], p. 89).
- 24In the case of the Lagoons of New Celedonia, inscribed by France in 2008 under the criteria (vii), (ix) and (x) [3], employment related to ecosystem services of the properties’ conservation scheme include 350 professionals in the domain of artisanal fisheries and 1600 professionals in the domain of blue tourism services ([23], p. 40).
- 26The role of posidonia meadows in absorbing atmospheric CO2 emissions is significant. The example of the Ibiza, Biodiversity and Culture World Heritage property is illustrative ([23], p. 22).
- 27Mexico received $62,000 in 2007 for the recuperation of supervision infrastructure lost after hurricane Dean in Sian Ka'an Biosphere Reserve [28].
- 28Philippines have repeatedly received international assistance for conservation measures of the Tubbataha Reef Marine Park after its designation as a World Heritage site: In 1996 it received $20,000 as technical assistance for the protection and public awareness for its conservation; in 2003, $20,000 for the conduct of an impact analysis of illegal fishing activities on the conservation of the site; in 2006, the National Forum on the conservation of the Tubbataha Reef Marine Park and the Greater Sulu Sea was funded with $29,816; in 2010 it received $29,996 for improving conservation and management in the Tubbataha Reefs; and in 2012 $22,262 for the Strengthening Conservation Management Policies [28].
- 29Belize has received financial assistance of $9700 from the World Heritage Fund for the preparation of its tentative list for natural heritage (including marine heritage) in 1993 [28]. Philippines have also received preparatory assistance ($10,500) for the systematic review of protected area system to prepare a list of potential World Heritage sites and nomination dossiers in 1989 (including marine sites) and an extra $18,488 for the preparation of a World Heritage extension nomination for Tubbataha Reef Marine Park in the Philippines in 2007 [28].
- 30It is estimated that 70% of the external funding raised for World Heritage sites is supplied through the Global Environmental Facility ([29], p. 2).
- 31The project on sustainable tourism in the Wadden Sea region (see above) funded by the European Regional Fund and the Interreg IVB North Sea Region Programme constitute an illustrative example.
- 32Private companies have co-funded several marine World Heritage projects such as the project to conserve freshwater, marine and coastal resources in and around Sian Ka’an in Mexico.
- 33Such as the German World Heritage Foundation or the NESCO/Netherlands Funds-in-Trust.
- 34Such as the Nordic World Heritage Foundation or the African World Heritage Fund.
- 35“The States Parties to this Convention shall consider or encourage the establishment of public and private foundations or associations whose purpose is to invite donations for the protection of the cultural and natural heritage as defined in Articles 1 and 2 of the Convention”.
- 36In 2006 revenues from entrance fees in Tubbataha Reefs covered 80% of the core management budget ([23], p. 39).
- 38It should be mentioned that, in the case of natural heritage, international criminal responsibility is at present excluded for environmental damage [33] in contrast to the cultural heritage domain where acts against cultural heritage were brought before international criminal courts [34]. The example of the shelling attack on the Old City of Dubrovnik, a World Heritage site, during the civil war in the former Yugoslavia is illustrative: The act was characterized as “an attack not only against the history and heritage of the region, but also against the cultural heritage of humankind” by the International Criminal Court for the Former Yugoslavia ([35], para. 51). A more recent example is the opening of a case before the International Criminal Court in September 2015 against Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi for the destruction of cultural heritage in Mali [36].
- 39The public trusteeship concept has also been envisaged in the case of the Barcelona Convention system for the protection of the Mediterranean See [45].
- 40Reactive monitoring derives from states parties’ obligations assumed according to article 4 of the Convention (see above) and constitutes a process initiated by the WH Committee when “exceptional circumstances occur or work is undertaken which may have an impact on the Outstanding Universal Value of the property or its state of conservation” ([4], para. 169). Reactive monitoring is foreseen in cases where a World Heritage property is or is intended to be inscribed in the List of World Heritage in Danger (as in the case of the Belize Barrier Reef System [46]), or in the procedures that may result in the deletion of a site from the World Heritage List.
- 41In line with article 29 of the Convention “states parties are requested to submit reports to the UNESCO General Conference through the World Heritage Committee on the legislative and administrative provisions they have adopted and other actions which they have taken for the application of the Convention, including the state of conservation of the World Heritage properties located on their territories” ([4], para. 199). Periodic reporting system is organized on a regional basis, since states of the same geographical region have to submit their periodic report every six years. In this way the Convention’s monitoring processes unfold both at the national and at the regional levels. This approach also facilitates the assessment of transboundary sites as in the case of The Wadden Sea or the Kluane/Wrangell-St. Elias/Glacier Bay/Tatshenshini-Alsek World Heritage properties mentioned above.
- 42In situ assessment comprises the reactive monitoring missions at the request of the WH Committee and the advisory missions at the invitation of the states parties of the Convention ([4], paras. 31d and 184).
- 43As in the case of the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System inscribed in the List of World Heritage in Danger in 2009 after a joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN Reactive Monitoring mission in Belize, the latter was asked by the World Heritage Committee to implement a series of corrective measures [46]. After another IUCN Monitoring mission in 2013, Belize submitted a State of Conservation Report [47] to be followed by a joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN technical mission in early 2015 that agreed with the state party on “the development of a desired state of conservation for the removal of the property from the List of World Heritage in Danger” based on specific indicators, methods of verification and timeframe [48].
- 44Deliberations with local stakeholders as well as the managing authorities preceded the process of the consultation process with the competent authorities for the adoption of the additional measures in the case of the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System in 2015 mentioned above [48].
- 45From 1977 to 2015, the Operational Guidelines have been revised over 20 times [52].
- 46There is no “universally agreed definition” of the eco-system based approach; there is, however, a common apprehension of its main components and processes, such as the conservation of the ecosystem structures, comprehensive and adaptive management, integration of regional seas concerns in marine management, adoption of participatory models of governance, and use of scientific and traditional knowledge [53,54].
- 47Defined as “a [public] ([55], p. 18) process of analyzing and allocating parts of three-dimensional marine spaces to specific uses, to achieve ecological, economic and social objectives that are usually specified through the political process; the MSP process usually results in a comprehensive plan or vision for a marine region. MSP is an element of [ecosystem-based] ([55], pp. 7, 10) sea use management" ([56], p. 13).
- 48The legal basis for delisting is article 11 para. 2 concerning the obligation of the World Heritage Committee to periodically update the World Heritage List.
- 49Article 1 defines cultural heritage as “monuments: architectural works, works of monumental sculpture and painting, elements or structures of an archaeological nature, inscriptions, cave dwellings and combinations of features, which are of outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science; groups of buildings: groups of separate or connected buildings which, because of their architecture, their homogeneity or their place in the landscape, are of outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science; sites: works of man or the combined works of nature and man, and areas including archaeological sites which are of outstanding universal value from the historical, aesthetic, ethnological or anthropological point of view.”
- 50In relation to the obligation of contracting parties to provide assistance for the “identification, protection, conservation and presentation of the cultural and natural heritage” inscribed on the World Heritage List or the List of World Heritage in Danger, following a request by the host state.
- 51The Sanctuary for Mediterranean Marine Mammals was established by the Pelagos Agreement, signed by France, Italy and the Principality of Monaco. It includes marine areas falling within and beyond national jurisdiction representing a large ecosystem [68].
- 52According to which “[t]he protection and conservation of the natural and cultural heritage are a significant contribution to sustainable development” ([70], para. 6).
- 53According to Article 11 para. 3, “[t]he inclusion of a property in the World Heritage List requires the consent of the state concerned. The inclusion of a property situated in the territory, sovereignty or jurisdiction over which is claimed by more than one state shall in no way prejudice the rights of the parties to the dispute.”
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Zervaki, A. Marine World Heritage and the Quest for Sustainability. Laws 2016, 5, 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5010007
Zervaki A. Marine World Heritage and the Quest for Sustainability. Laws. 2016; 5(1):7. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5010007
Chicago/Turabian StyleZervaki, Antonia. 2016. "Marine World Heritage and the Quest for Sustainability" Laws 5, no. 1: 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5010007
APA StyleZervaki, A. (2016). Marine World Heritage and the Quest for Sustainability. Laws, 5(1), 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5010007