Documents found
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401.More information
AbstractThe poet Herménégilde Chiasson plays with materials (paper, typefaces, illustrations, page layouts), with forms (lyrical, epic, ironic, and didactic), and with orality, scholarly culture and refined writing. Mourir à Scoudouc is as supple as a “cahier”, as deep as a “retour au pays natal” (Translator's note: A reference to Aimé Césaire's work, Cahier d'un retour au pays natal). Three other books of poetry—Prophéties, Vous, Climats—are also examined with their shadows and light, separations and apparitions. Angels are on watch in windows, carving the shape of infinity, drawing black on white, blue on blue. Without creating a halt in the journey, the poet's pen (or cursor) enables us to see or obliquely imagine the world at its frontiers.
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402.More information
AbstractSelf-proclaimed “the British Raj legatee”, independent India has until recently only developed a land-based defence strategy, relinquishing its maritime heritage and acting as a brown water Navy in charge of the security of its coasts, far from the chokepoints once patrolled by the Royal Navy. The emergence of a blue water navy has been a long and inconsistent process, slowed by budgetary constraints. India now needs to formulate a clear maritime strategy as a means of ensuring its economic development, which implies patrolling along the Indian straits.
Keywords: Inde, océan Indien, surveillance côtière, marine indienne de haute mer, détroits de l'Inde, stratégie maritime, India, Indian Ocean, brown water Navy, blue water Navy, straits of India, maritime strategy
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404.More information
The adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biodiversity beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ) (known as the “High Seas Treaty”) is the product of almost twenty years of international negotiations. In an international context where Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) states are traditionally presented as occupying a peripheral position, this article examines the influence of LAC states in the normative development process affecting the regulation of the high seas. To this end, a qualitative analysis using process-tracing is applied to the period 2008-2022, drawing on a variety of sources (UN sites, semi-structured interviews, research projects, grey literature). The article is thus positioned at the crossroads of two debates: the first, on LAC States in international environmental and oceanic negotiations ; the second, on the place of LAC in the development of global standards.
Keywords: Océans, négociation internationale, Amérique latine, Caraïbes, diplomatie, Oceans, international negotiations, Latin America, Caribbean, diplomacy
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