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New Zealand's maritime territory is 15 times its landmass – here's why we need a ministry for the ocean

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, July 26, 2023

The recent failure of the proposed Kermadec ocean sanctuary is a striking reminder of the need for leadership around New Zealand’s ocean policies.

Key Points: 
  • The recent failure of the proposed Kermadec ocean sanctuary is a striking reminder of the need for leadership around New Zealand’s ocean policies.
  • The “no take” ocean sanctuary was meant to be one of the world’s largest marine protected areas.
  • But last month Te Ohu Kaimoana (which represents Māori fisheries interests) voted against the latest proposal.

New Zealand’s vast ocean territory

    • Aotearoa is surrounded by a sea territory 15 times the size of its landmass.
    • This extends from the shorelines of the main islands to the Kermadecs (Rangitāhua) in the northwest, the Chathams (Rēkohu) in the east and the subantarctic Campbell Island in the south Pacific ocean.
    • Two in three New Zealanders live within 5km of the shore and many use the ocean and coasts for recreational and cultural activities.

An ecosystem approach to marine policy

    • This involves managing the marine environment in a way that reconciles competing values without degrading the ocean ecosystem.
    • A more holistic and relational ecosystem-based approach to managing human activities in the ocean would acknowledge the inter-dependencies between living and non-living marine ecosystem components, including people.
    • Read more:
      Our oceans are in deep trouble – a 'mountains to sea' approach could make a real difference

Fundamental principles driving oceans policy

    • Our research found we already have legal and policy “hooks” (or promising reform initiatives underway) that can support ecosystem-based management across the four key marine policy areas of fisheries, conservation, coastal planning and Māori rights and interests.
    • Each of these policy areas operates on different time and geographic scales and is working towards (sometimes vastly) different policy objectives, with varying budgets and resources.
    • To overcome this, our research confirmed we need to agree on fundamental marine principles to “anchor” ecosystem-based management and ensure our policy objectives are complementary and consistent with Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

A ministry for the ocean

    • Marine policy is still spread across multiple laws and institutions working for different purposes.
    • Recent environmental reforms have focused on land-based issues of resource management, conservation and climate adaptation, taking a sector-by-sector approach and overlooking the interconnected threats facing our ocean.
    • We go further and argue Aotearoa needs a ministry for the ocean to match the ministerial portfolio, reflecting the complexity of marine management and departing from the terrestrial bias of our existing laws and institutions.
    • A dedicated ministry could ensure oversight, coordination and alignment of marine policy.

New Zealand's maritime territory is 15 times its landmass -- here's why we need a ministry for the ocean

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, July 26, 2023

The recent failure of the proposed Kermadec ocean sanctuary is a striking reminder of the need for leadership around New Zealand’s ocean policies.

Key Points: 
  • The recent failure of the proposed Kermadec ocean sanctuary is a striking reminder of the need for leadership around New Zealand’s ocean policies.
  • The “no take” ocean sanctuary was meant to be one of the world’s largest marine protected areas.
  • But last month Te Ohu Kaimoana (which represents Māori fisheries interests) voted against the latest proposal.

New Zealand’s vast ocean territory

    • Aotearoa is surrounded by a sea territory 15 times the size of its landmass.
    • This extends from the shorelines of the main islands to the Kermadecs (Rangitāhua) in the northwest, the Chathams (Rēkohu) in the east and the subantarctic Campbell Island in the south Pacific ocean.
    • Two in three New Zealanders live within 5km of the shore and many use the ocean and coasts for recreational and cultural activities.

An ecosystem approach to marine policy

    • This involves managing the marine environment in a way that reconciles competing values without degrading the ocean ecosystem.
    • A more holistic and relational ecosystem-based approach to managing human activities in the ocean would acknowledge the inter-dependencies between living and non-living marine ecosystem components, including people.
    • Read more:
      Our oceans are in deep trouble – a 'mountains to sea' approach could make a real difference

Fundamental principles driving oceans policy

    • Our research found we already have legal and policy “hooks” (or promising reform initiatives underway) that can support ecosystem-based management across the four key marine policy areas of fisheries, conservation, coastal planning and Māori rights and interests.
    • Each of these policy areas operates on different time and geographic scales and is working towards (sometimes vastly) different policy objectives, with varying budgets and resources.
    • To overcome this, our research confirmed we need to agree on fundamental marine principles to “anchor” ecosystem-based management and ensure our policy objectives are complementary and consistent with Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

A ministry for the ocean

    • Marine policy is still spread across multiple laws and institutions working for different purposes.
    • Recent environmental reforms have focused on land-based issues of resource management, conservation and climate adaptation, taking a sector-by-sector approach and overlooking the interconnected threats facing our ocean.
    • We go further and argue Aotearoa needs a ministry for the ocean to match the ministerial portfolio, reflecting the complexity of marine management and departing from the terrestrial bias of our existing laws and institutions.
    • A dedicated ministry could ensure oversight, coordination and alignment of marine policy.

Authors are resisting AI with petitions and lawsuits. But they have an advantage: we read to form relationships with writers

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, July 25, 2023

In the United States last week, the Authors Guild submitted an open letter to the chief executives of prominent AI companies, asking AI developers to obtain consent from, credit and fairly compensate authors.

Key Points: 
  • In the United States last week, the Authors Guild submitted an open letter to the chief executives of prominent AI companies, asking AI developers to obtain consent from, credit and fairly compensate authors.
  • The letter was signed by more than 10,000 authors and their supporters, including James Patterson, Jennifer Egan, Jonathan Franzen and Margaret Atwood.
  • Unpacking these concerns often reveals as much about existing practices of writing and publishing as it does about the new technology.

How does AI work?

    • Such models examine how text is constructed, and essentially calculate the statistical likelihood certain words will appear together.
    • In other words, generative AI creates a purely structural, probabilistic understanding of language and uses that to guess a plausible response.
    • If you can access writing in your browser, it’s safe to assume AI models are using it.
    • In the world’s first copyright-related ChatGPT lawsuit, two US authors (Mona Awad and Paul Tremblay) are currently suing OpenAI, claiming their books were used to train the AI software without their consent.

Can AI generate ‘human’ writing?

    • Browsing Amazon in July 2023, 984 books explicitly attribute ChatGPT, the best-known and most widely used generative AI, as an author.
    • But can generative AI produce acceptably human creative writing?
    • These articles, however, are procedural, fill-in-the-blanks style affairs: a kind of computational madlibs of exchange rates and share prices.
    • Similarly, unlike the AP example, this work is “original” insomuch as it is a new, previously non-existent piece of creative text.
    • Read more:
      Replacing news editors with AI is a worry for misinformation, bias and accountability

AI and ‘the bestseller code’

    • The flurry of replies included authors such as Jennifer Brody, who managed to include AI protections in recent contract negotiations.
    • Overwhelmingly, however, provisions regarding AI are not yet explicitly included in author contracts.
    • At what point does a clause in an author contract regarding AI usage mean an author can’t use their own writing to generate new work?
    • Publishers acquiring the right to use manuscripts to train generative AI is speculative.
    • Some are suggesting AI will render the author disposable: publishers will be able to package and market any piece of AI-generated text.

What do we value?

    • It’s that these are values are at the heart of reading and writing.
    • Henry James wrote that the:
      deepest quality of a work of art will always be the quality of the mind of the producer.
    • deepest quality of a work of art will always be the quality of the mind of the producer.

Publications - Reports in relation with the discharge to the European Commission - Committee on Budgetary Control

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Tuesday, July 25, 2023

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Publications - Reports in relation with the discharge to the European Development Fund - EDF - Committee on Budgetary Control

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Tuesday, July 25, 2023

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    Reports in relation with the discharge to the European Development Fund - EDF (8th, 9th, 10th et 11th)

Publications - Questionnaires to Agencies - Committee on Budgetary Control

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Tuesday, July 25, 2023

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    Standard Questionnaire
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How citizens could help government with emergency decisions in the next pandemic

Retrieved on: 
Monday, July 24, 2023

One of the key questions is who should make decisions in an emergency, and how.

Key Points: 
  • One of the key questions is who should make decisions in an emergency, and how.
  • But as former chancellor George Osborne pointed out in his testimony to the inquiry, expert advice isn’t necessarily enough on its own.
  • She gave the example of the Welsh government using online platforms to consult with people with certain characteristics protected under the Equality Act.

Engaging the public

    • Deliberative democracy is the process of engaging a cross-section of the public in making decisions.
    • According to a 2022 government report, the decision to delay locking down was partly based on the “widespread view that the public would not accept a lockdown for a significant period”.
    • Members of the public largely complied with COVID restrictions, showing themselves willing to sacrifice some liberty in exchange for fewer lives lost to COVID.
    • Read more:
      COVID: how incorrect assumptions and poor foresight hampered the UK's pandemic preparedness

      There have been some public deliberations on COVID-related issues in the UK during the pandemic, led by academics, public sector bodies and independent research groups.

Diverse experiences and perspectives

    • A major benefit of engaging the public is the diverse experiences and perspectives they bring.
    • For example, a public deliberation on colorectal cancer screening recommendations revealed concerns around the lack of information available about different screening options.
    • Moving beyond expert voices can also help bring attention to the perspectives of marginalised communities who are often politically ignored.

Preparing for the next pandemic

    • These are the same three factors researchers at the OECD have identified as making a topic suitable for public deliberation.
    • And speed wouldn’t be a problem if structures are built for citizen participation in time for the next pandemic.
    • Doing so could empower citizens, improve public trust, revitalise British democracy, and prepare us for the next pandemic.

Today's Measuring What Matters statement is just a first step – now we have to turn goals into action

Retrieved on: 
Friday, July 21, 2023

Those goals include prosperity, resilience, health, equality, global responsibility, cultural vibrancy and connection – not dissimilar to the themes in Measuring What Matters.

Key Points: 
  • Those goals include prosperity, resilience, health, equality, global responsibility, cultural vibrancy and connection – not dissimilar to the themes in Measuring What Matters.
  • Realising the potential of Measuring What Matters will require the support and vigilance of the Australian people.
  • Measuring what matters, when the people have been robustly engaged in defining what matters, is a vital precondition for the economic system change Australia needs.
  • Read more: Australians' national wellbeing shows a glass half full: Measuring What Matters report

Highlights - Mission to Mozambique - 24-28.7.23 - Committee on Budgets

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, July 20, 2023

Mission to Mozambique - 24-28.7.23

Key Points: 
  • Mission to Mozambique - 24-28.7.23
    20-07-2023 - 16:25
    The Committee on Budgets travels to Mozambique from 24 to 27 July 2023.
  • The main objective of this mission is to assess Mozambique's most pressing needs in terms of EU financial support.
  • Members will meet Mozambican authorities, the Assembly of the Republic, implementing partners of the EU (Member States and UN agencies and World Bank).
  • Finally, the programme foresees gatherings with civil society, NGOs, including women organisations and LGBTIQ+ organisations, as well as trade unions.