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23 Asia Pac. J. Envtl. L. 1 (2020)

handle is hein.journals/apjel23 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Asia Pacific Journal of Environmental Law, Vol. 23 No. 1, 2020, pp. 1-5


Editorial



Anthropogenic marine impacts, reform of environmental
governance in China, and biopiracy in Southeast Asia


1 APJEL   IN THE   ASIA  PACIFIC   REGION

This is the first issue of APJEL in the 2020 volume, and it features articles on environ-
mental subjects relevant both to particular states and to the Asia Pacific region generally.
The three articles in this issue follow the 13 in the 2019 volume, which concerned a range
of individual jurisdictions and comparative articles addressing Australia, Australia and
China, Bangladesh,  Bangladesh  and China, Indonesia, the Maldives, New  Zealand,
Papua New  Guinea, the South China Sea region, and Thailand as well as a jurisprudential
contribution relevant to the region.
   That there is increasing scholarly interest in environmental law and policy in the Asia
Pacific region is clear. Our 2018 volume included articles on Australia, China, Fiji, India,
Indonesia, Japan, Solomon Islands, and Thailand. Before that, our 2017 volume included
articles on aspects of environmental law in Australia, China, India, Japan, and The
Republic of Korea as well as on general issues affecting environmental governance in
the Asia Pacific region.
   We  trust that APJEL continues to make  a strong contribution toward advanced
environmental law  scholarship in the region.
   We  welcome  both submissions of general environmental relevance and submissions
on specific, focused issues, if both are of relevance to the Asia Pacific. APJEL's goal
remains the publication of insightful research on a broad range of environmental law
issues across the Asia Pacific, believing that much can be learned from comparisons
and contrasts with and between states and regions facing similar realities, constraints,
and opportunities. The real core of quality scholarship is to be found in deep analysis
of specific environmental law developments in specific jurisdictions, and the articles
we  seek to publish will always demonstrate this.


2 THE   ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

2.1 Anthropogenic   underwater   noise pollution
Three decades  ago, in Last Chance to See,' Douglas Adams   and Mark  Carwardine
recorded their trip to China to attempt to see the Yangtze river dolphin2 or baiji. After
explaining that the Yangtze is a turbid river and that the baiji had evolved to rely on
acute hearing and echolocation to find prey and communicate, they described the volume
of noise in the Yangtze today - stemming especially from 'the engines of rusty old tramp
steamers, container ships, giant ferries, passenger liners and barges'3 - and explained that


1.   Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine, Last Chance to See (Heinemann, 1990).
2.   Lipotes vexillifer.
3.   Adams  and Carwardine (n 1) 148.

© 2020 The Author                         Journal compilation © 2020 Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
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