Functional Evolution and Development Response of the Rule of Law on Wetland Protection in China
The purpose of this study is to sort out and explain the internal logic and development direction of the construction of the rule of law on wetland protection in China.The research methods include historical analysis,normative analysis and literature review.The research results show that 1)the rule of law on wetland protection in China has gone through the process of"salvage governance","comprehensive governance"to"holistic governance",and the function of the rule of law on wetland protection is constantly changing.In the normative direction,it is manifested in the progressive improvement of"element protection-function protection-system protection",and in the practical direction,it is manifested in the dialectical development of"utilization management-protection management-safety management".2)In view of the strategic needs of environmental gain,green development and ecological security,the rule of law on wetland protection in China needs to transcend the endogenous dilemma of the norms of"anthropogenic law",return to the value deviation of the protection of legal interests,and strengthen the regulatory limitations of risk prevention and control.3)Based on the value of"harmonious coexistence of human beings and nature",the rule of law on wetland protection should take the order of human homogeneity,the fairness of benefit distribution and the adaptability of risk prevention and control as its functional guidelines.In conclusion,it is necessary to further strengthen the rule of law on wetland protection in the direction of synergistic and adaptive development in the future,to promote the benign interaction between economic and social rationality and ecological rationality,to promote the standardization of wetland protection and wetland utilization,and to seek a systematic connection between risk regulation and risk adaptation.
rule of law on wetland protectioninterpersonal isomorphismwetland utilizationwetland protectioninterest distributionrisk adaptation