Tuesday, August 4, 2009: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM | |||
Acoma/Zuni, Albuquerque Convention Center | |||
OOS 13 - The Public Trust Doctrine: Where Ecology Meets Natural Resources Management | |||
The Public Trust Doctrine (PTD) is an ancient legal concept that is incorporated in U.S. law, but rarely invoked outside of the coastal zone. In its most basic form, the PTD obliges governments to manage common natural resources in the best interest of their citizens, both current and future. Historically the doctrine has protected the public’s rights to fishing, navigation, and commerce over and in navigable waterways and tidal waters. Today it is a state-focused legal doctrine that has been integral to the protection of some coastal ecosystems and ecosystem services in many states. This session will show why a more expansive view of the PTD should be taken and how it could provide a powerful and intuitive framework for re-examining environmental law across ecosystems. This discussion about the PTD can be viewed as an essential component of operationalizing the 2009 ESA meeting theme of Ecological Knowledge and a Global Sustainable Society, because the doctrine provides a holistic platform for turning our understanding of ecosystem services into sound environmental policy. The objectives of this organized oral session are threefold: 1) to introduce a broad audience to a powerful, but underutilized management tool 2) to jumpstart a new consortium for PTD studies that will synthesize the latest research about ecosystem services and match it with specific policy recommendations based on the doctrine; and 3) to link ecologists who are developing the science of ecosystem services with the legal and policy experts who are already part of this nascent consortium so that their policy recommendations reflect and incorporate scientific findings. Each presenter will speak for 15 minutes about his or her particular area of expertise: the “Sky Trust” concept; protecting ecosystem services with the PTD; using the doctrine to manage watersheds; the PTD and costal resources management; the ecological justifications for an expansive view of the doctrine in U.S. ocean waters; the manifestation of the PTD in international environmental law; and the general role of the PTD in natural resources governance. After each presentation, we will have a 5-minute period for questions. The moderator will introduce each presenter by stating how his or her work informs the topic and builds on the previous presentation. | |||
Organizer: | Mary Turnipseed, Duke University | ||
Co-organizer: | Raphael D. Sagarin, Duke University | ||
Moderator: | Raphael Sagarin, Duke University | ||
8:00 AM | OOS 13-1 | International use of the public trust concept, and its application to the ocean Peter H. Sand, University of Munich | |
8:20 AM | OOS 13-2 | Reimagining the public trust doctrine to conserve US ocean ecosystems Mary Turnipseed, Duke University | |
8:40 AM | OOS 13-3 | CANCELLED - The Public Trust Doctrine in coastal resources management Meg Caldwell, Stanford Law School | |
9:00 AM | OOS 13-4 | Public Trust Law and wildlife Michael Blumm, Lewis and Clark Law School | |
9:20 AM | OOS 13-5 | Protecting watersheds with the Public Trust Doctrine Richard Roos-Collins, National Heritage Institute | |
9:40 AM | Break | ||
9:50 AM | OOS 13-6 | The Sky Trust and the Public Trust Doctrine Peter Barnes, Tomales Bay Institute | |
10:10 AM | OOS 13-7 | The Public Trust Doctrine and climate change: Old wine in a new bottle Patrick Parenteau, Vermont Law School | |
10:30 AM | OOS 13-8 | The future of coastal research and management: Six major themes identified by the Coastal Barrier Island Network Amy M. Williams, Texas A&M University - College Station, Rusty A. Feagin, Texas A&M University, Nancy L. Jackson, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Willam K. Smith, Wake Forest University | |
10:50 AM | OOS 13-9 | Towards sustainable fisheries: Assessing co-management effectiveness for the Columbia River Basin Sibyl Wentz Diver, University of California - Berkeley | |
11:10 AM | OOS 13-10 | Management considerations for bees: Substrate preferences for ground-nesting bees (moisture, soil type, vegetation, and disturbance) Maria Teresa Van Dyke, University of Virginia, T'ai H. Roulston, University of Virginia |
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See more of The 94th ESA Annual Meeting (August 2 -- 7, 2009)