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Marine resource damage assessment: Liability and compensation for environmental damage
Maes, F. (2005). Marine resource damage assessment: Liability and compensation for environmental damage. Springer: Dordrecht. ISBN 978-1-4020-3369-8; e-ISBN 978-1-4020-3368-1. XVII, 284 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3368-0

Available in  Author 
    VLIZ: Law and policy (General) LAW.20 [103462]

Keywords
    Damage
    International law
    Liability
    Pollution
    Resources > Natural resources > Marine resources
    Marine/Coastal

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Content
  • Maes, F. (2005). Introduction, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. xv-xvii, more
  • Brans, E.H.P. (2005). Estimating damages under the 2004 EC Directive on Environmental Liability, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 3-25, more
  • Proot, L.; Bocken, H. (2005). Environmental damage and Belgian law, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 27-41. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3368-0_2, more
  • Medina, L. (2005). Compensation for ecological damage and Latvian law, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 43-55, more
  • Nichols, J. (2005). Scope of compensation for environmental damage under the 1992 Civil Liability Convention and the 1992 Fund Convention, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 59-66, more
  • Mac Innis, K.A. (2005). The Canadian SSOP Fund and Environmental Damage Assessment (EDA) in Canada, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 67-84, more
  • Gonsaeles, G. (2005). The impact of EC decision-making on the International Regime for Oil Pollution Damage: the supplementary fund example, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 85-131. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3368-0_6, more
  • Nunes, P.A.L.D.; De Blaeij, A.T. (2005). Economic assessment of marine quality benefits: applying the use of non-market valuation methods, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 135-163, more
  • Van Biervliet, K.; Le Roy, D.; Nunes, P.A.L.D. (2005). A contingent valuation study of an accidental oil spill along the Belgian coast, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 165-207. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3368-0_8, more
  • Scory, S. (2005). The use of mathematical models for estimating oil pollution damage at sea, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 211-252. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3368-0_9, more
  • Douvere, F. (2005). Socio-economic value of the human activities in the marine environment: the Belgian case, in: Maes, F. Marine resource damage assessment: liability and compensation for environmental damage. pp. 253-269. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3368-0_10, more

Abstract
    The contributions to this book are partly the output of a research project conducted between 1998 and 2002 in Belgium and a conference held at the Ghent University, Belgium, in June 2003 on the topic “Marine Resource Damage Assessment and Compensation for Environmental Damage” (MARE-DASM). The Belgian Federal Science Policy sponsored both the research and the conference. MARE-DASM research focused on: (i) the estimation and distribution of marine contaminants in order to assess their long term effects (ecotoxicology); (ii) the integration of these result into a Biological Effects SubModel and a mathematical model assessing the risks associated with accidental spillage of oil at sea and the damage this can cause (modelling); (iii) the assessment of the willingness to pay for ecological damage, based on the Contingent Valuation Method (economics); (iv) the development and evaluation of measures to be taken in order to guarantee a sustainable use of the Belgian part of the North Sea, taking into account the economic and social interests and values (social economics); (v) the potential to develop technical and legal procedures that allow ecological damage to the marine environment to be evaluated and compensated, taking into account constraints in national and international liability legislation (legal).

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