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This workshop explores the role of institutional frameworks in managing water and ocean resources in the context of climate change. Discussions include stakeholder involvement in adaptation efforts, case studies from the Arctic Sunrise incident and Brazilian and Colombian valleys, and the establishment of a community-public-private partnership for renewable energy on Sumba Island. Additionally, the implications of ocean fertilization experiments on the high seas and the importance of coherent legal frameworks for Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) will be addressed.
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Workshop room 24 Institutional Frameworks in Water & Oceans Law • The role of stakeholders in Adaption to Climate Change – O. Spijkers, A. Keessen (UU) • The Arctic Sunrise incident: Misunderstanding the role of public international law? - A. Oude Elferink (UU) • Asymmetrical power relations between communities, institutions and private actors in Tapajos Valley (Brazil) and Cauca Valley (Colombia) (LAR project), - T. Boekhout van Solinge (UU) • Sumba Iconic Island: A case study on Establishing a Community-Public-Private Partnership for Providing Renewable Energy – T. Lambooy (UU) • Discussion • Legal Issues and Institutional Reactions concerning Ocean Fertilisation Experiments on the High Seas – B. Bosschen (UU) • The Importance of a Coherent Legal Framework for the National Implementation of IWRM Principles – B. Teeuwen (Independent advisor & Dutch Water Governance Centre) • Understanding Transboundary Governance of Climate adaptation: Enabling and Constraining Characteristics in the Netherlands and North Rhine Westphalia – M. van Eerd, C. Dieperink, M. Wiering (Radboud University Nijmegen, UU) • Discussion & Conclusions by chair R. Nehmelman (UU)