Année : 2019
Auteur(s) : BOU DAGHER KHARRAT M., BOZZANO M., FADY B.
Référence : T. XL, n°3, 2019, pp. 374-374.
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Since its adoption by a majority of countries following on the Earth Summit at Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) in 1992, the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) has formed the guidelines for both international and national strategies and efforts for sustainable development. The CBD recognises expicitly that if no protection is given to biodiversity, the sustainable management of the environment, which is so beneficial to human societies, will be impossible. This is equally true for forests and is recognised as such by political processes like Forest Europe or cooperative undertakings like the FAO's Silva Mediterranea, two examples which respectively involve 46 and 26 countries from around the Mediterranean Rim and from Europe.