International Fisheries Law since Rio: The Continued Rise of the Precautionary Principle

Author(s):  
David Freestone
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdullah Al Arif

There are endless debates on the status of the precautionary principle in the realm of international environmental law. The confusion often occurs on the use of phrases that express the concept of precaution, such as precautionary principle, precautionary approach and precautionary measures. The precautionary principle was incorporated in major international fisheries instruments amid all of these debates and confusions. This article seeks to examine the status of the precautionary principle in international fisheries law. This article also surveys the legislative and regulatory frameworks for exploitation, conservation and management of marine fisheries in Bangladesh to find the application of the precautionary principle in the marine fisheries regime of Bangladesh. The study reveals that the application of the precautionary principle is almost absent in the marine fisheries management frameworks in Bangladesh and calls for incorporation of the same for conservation of marine fisheries and marine biodiversity.


Author(s):  
Eugen Pissarskoi

How can we reasonably justify a climate policy goal if we accept that only possible consequences from climate change are known? Precautionary principles seem to offer promising guidelines for reasoning in such epistemic situations. This chapter presents two versions of the precautionary principle (PP) and defends one of them as morally justifiable. However, it argues that current versions of the PP do not allow discrimination between relevant climate change policies. Therefore, the chapter develops a further version of the PP, the Controllability Precautionary Principle (CPP), and defends its moral plausibility. The CPP incorporates the following idea: in a situation when the possible outcomes of the available actions cannot be ranked with regard to their value, the choice between available options for action should rest on the comparison of how well decision makers can control the processes of the implementation of the available strategies.


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