The international law of the sea:
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Späterer Titel: | Rothwell, Donald The international law of the sea |
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Hauptverfasser: | , |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford ; Portland, Oregon
Hart Publishing
2016
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Ausgabe: | Second edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xlviii, 553 Seiten Diagramm |
ISBN: | 9781782256847 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804176078170750976 |
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adam_text | THE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE SEA
/ ROTHWELL, DONALD [AUTHOR] 1959-
: 2016
TABLE OF CONTENTS / INHALTSVERZEICHNIS
THE HISTORY AND SOURCES OF THE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE SEA
COASTAL WATERS
TERRITORIAL SEA AND CONTIGUOUS ZONE
THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE
THE CONTINENTAL SHELF
THE DEEP SEABED
HIGH SEAS
ARCHIPELAGIC STATES
LANDLOCKED AND GEOGRAPHICALLY DISADVANTAGED STATES
NAVIGATIONAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS
INTERNATIONAL STRAITS AND ARCHIPELAGIC NAVIGATION
MILITARY USES OF THE OCEANS
MARINE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
MARINE SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
DELIMITATION OF MARITIME BOUNDARIES
MARITIME REGULATION AND ENFORCEMENT
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT IN THE LAW OF THE SEA
OCEANS GOVERNANCE
DIESES SCHRIFTSTUECK WURDE MASCHINELL ERZEUGT.
Titel: The international law of the sea
Autor: Rothwell, Donald
Jahr: 2016
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements.....................................................................................................................v
Preface to the Second Edition..................................................................................................vii
List of Abbreviations.............................................................................................................xxiii
List of Tables and Figures....................................................................................................xxvii
Table of Cases........................................................................................................................xxix
Table of Treaties....................................................................................................................xxxv
1. The History and Sources of the International Law of the Sea.........................................1
I. Introduction...........................................................................................................1
II. Historical Development of the International Law of the Sea..............................2
A. The Grotian View of the Oceans...................................................................3
B. The Freedom of the Sea and Territorial Sea Claims.....................................4
C. 1930 Hague Conference.................................................................................4
D. Truman Proclamation....................................................................................5
III. Work of the International Law Commission........................................................6
IV. The First United Nations Conference on the Law of the
Sea and the Geneva Conventions..........................................................................6
V. The Second United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea..........................9
VI. The Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea..........................10
A. Claims to New Maritime Zones in the 1960s.............................................10
B. The Regime of the Deep Seabed.................................................................11
C. UNCLOS III Conference Dynamics............................................................12
D. The United States Position on Common
Heritage and the Deep Seabed....................................................................14
VII. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea....................................14
A. Core Provisions............................................................................................15
B. Entry into Force...........................................................................................18
C. 1994 Implementing Agreement...................................................................18
D. 1995 Fish Stocks Agreement........................................................................19
VIII. Institutional Frameworks....................................................................................20
IX. Sources of the International Law of the Sea.......................................................22
A. Customary International Law.....................................................................22
B. Treaties and Conventions............................................................................23
C. Unilateral Declarations................................................................................24
D. Subsidiary Sources of Law...........................................................................24
E. Soft Law........................................................................................................24
xii Contents
X. Challenges for the International Law of the Sea..................................................25
A. Climate Change and Ocean Acidification....................................................25
B. Marine Environmental Security...................................................................26
C. Creeping Jurisdiction....................................................................................27
XI. Review and Reform of the International Law of the Sea.....................................27
XII. Further Reading.....................................................................................................29
2. Coastal Waters..................................................................................................................30
I. Introduction..........................................................................................................30
II. History...................................................................................................................31
III. Baselines.................................................................................................................33
A. The Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries Case............................................................33
B. International Law Commission....................................................................35
i. International Law Commission Draff Articles....................................35
C. UNCLOS 1......................................................................................................37
D. Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone...........................38
E. Post-UNCLOS I State Practice......................................................................39
R LOSC..............................................................................................................40
IV. Key Issues in the Delimitation of Coastal Waters................................................42
A. Low-Water......................................................................................................42
B. Straight Baselines...........................................................................................44
C. Low-Tide Elevations......................................................................................46
D. Juridical Bays..................................................................................................48
E. Historic Bays..................................................................................................49
F. Contemporary State Practice........................................................................51
V. Internal Waters......................................................................................................53
A. Views of the ILC............................................................................................53
B. Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone...........................54
C. LOSC..............................................................................................................54
D. State Practice..................................................................................................55
i. Territorial Sovereign Rights and Internal Waters................................56
ii. Port Access.............................................................................................57
iii. Jurisdiction over Foreign Ships in Port................................................58
VI. Further Reading.....................................................................................................59
3. Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone..............................................................................60
I. Introduction..........................................................................................................60
II. Territorial Sea in Customary International Law..................................................61
III. Codification of the Territorial Sea........................................................................63
A. The Views of the International Associations................................................63
B. International Law Commission....................................................................64
C. UNCLOS 1......................................................................................................65
D. Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone...........................66
E. UNCLOS II....................................................................................................68
F. State Practice..................................................................................................69
IV. UNCLOS III and the LOSC...................................................................................70
Contents xiii
V. Contemporary Territorial Sea in State Practice...................................................73
A. Breadth of the Territorial Sea........................................................................73
B. Sovereignty and Jurisdiction.........................................................................75
C. Innocent and Transit Passage........................................................................78
VI. Contiguous Zone...................................................................................................79
A. ILC..................................................................................................................80
B. UNCLOS I and the Geneva Convention......................................................80
C. UNCLOS III and the LOSC...........................................................................81
D. State Practice..................................................................................................82
VII. Further Reading.....................................................................................................84
4. The Exclusive Economic Zone........................................................................................85
I. Introduction..........................................................................................................85
II. The Concept of the EEZ........................................................................................86
III. Breadth of the EEZ and its Relationship with Other
Maritime Zones.....................................................................................................88
IV. Coastal State Rights and Obligations in the EEZ.................................................90
A. Sovereign Rights............................................................................................91
i. Living Resources....................................................................................91
ii. Non-Living Resources...........................................................................92
B. Jurisdictional Rights......................................................................................94
i. Artificial Islands, Installations and Structures.....................................94
ii. Marine Scientific Research....................................................................96
iii. Marine Environmental Protection.......................................................96
V. Rights and Duties of Other States in the EEZ......................................................97
A. Navigation and Overflight.............................................................................97
i. Environmental Security........................................................................98
ii. Military Security....................................................................................99
B. Submarine Cables and Pipelines.................................................................101
VI. Further Reading...................................................................................................101
5. The Continental Shelf....................................................................................................102
I. Introduction........................................................................................................102
II. The Truman Proclamation..................................................................................104
III. UNCLOS I and the Geneva Convention............................................................106
A. Work of the International Law Commission.............................................106
B. The Convention on the Continental Shelf.................................................109
C. North Sea Continental Shelf Cases...............................................................110
IV. UNCLOS III.........................................................................................................112
V LOSC....................................................................................................................114
A. Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf.................................116
B. Rights and Duties of Coastal and Other States..........................................123
C. Relationship with the EEZ Regime.............................................................125
VI. Further Reading...................................................................................................126
xiv Contents
6. The Deep Seabed............................................................................................................127
I. Introduction.......................................................................................................127
II. The Deep Seabed: Environment and Resources...............................................128
III. Early Debates: Sedentary Fisheries and the Deep Seabed................................132
IV. The Moratorium Resolution and Principles Resolution.................................133
V. UNCLOS III.......................................................................................................136
A. Reciprocating States Regime.....................................................................139
VI. The LOSC and 1994 Agreement........................................................................139
A. The Main Revisions in the 1994 Agreement.............................................141
VII. The International Seabed Authority and the Seabed Mining System.............142
A. The ISA.......................................................................................................142
i. The Assembly.....................................................................................144
ii. The Council.......................................................................................144
B. The Seabed Disputes Chamber and the Seabed Mining
Advisory Opinion........................................................................................145
i. Recent Activities of the ISA and the Mining Code..........................147
C. Utilising the Deep Seabed Mining Regime...............................................150
VIII. Further Reading.................................................................................................153
7. High Seas........................................................................................................................154
I. Introduction.......................................................................................................154
A. The High Seas as a Managed Common Area...........................................155
II. Historical Development of the High Seas........................................................156
A. Pre-Grotian Freedoms of the High Seas...................................................156
B. Grotian Vision of the High Seas................................................................156
C. The High Seas in Customary International Law......................................157
i. Jurisdiction Over Vessels on the High Seas......................................158
III. Codification of the High Seas Regime..............................................................160
A. Pre-Geneva Codifications..........................................................................160
B. Work of the ILC.........................................................................................161
C. UNCLOS 1..................................................................................................161
D. UNCLOS III...............................................................................................162
IV. The LOSC and the High Seas............................................................................163
A. Freedom of the High Seas..........................................................................164
i. Freedom of Navigation......................................................................164
ii. Freedom of Overflight.......................................................................165
iii. Freedom to Lay Submarine Cables and Pipelines............................165
iv. Freedom to Construct Artificial Islands
and Other Installations......................................................................166
v. Freedom of Fishing............................................................................166
vi. Freedom of Scientific Research.........................................................167
B. Shipping.....................................................................................................167
i. Nationality of Ships...........................................................................168
ii. Duties of the Flag State......................................................................169
iii. Immunities.........................................................................................170
iv. Collisions............................................................................................170
v. Assistance to Persons at Sea..............................................................170
Contents xv
C. Prohibitions.................................................................................................171
i. Piracy...................................................................................................171
ii. Slavery..................................................................................................173
iii. Drug Trafficking..................................................................................174
iv. Unauthorised Broadcasting................................................................175
D. Enforcement.................................................................................................175
E. Conservation and Management of High Seas Living
Resources and Biodiversity..........................................................................177
i. Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine
Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction........................................177
F. Relationship with Other Maritime Zones..................................................178
V. F urther Reading...................................................................................................179
8. Archipelagic States.........................................................................................................180
I. Archipelagos and International Law...................................................................180
II. Early Codifications..............................................................................................182
III. UNCLOSI............................................................................................................183
IV. The Indonesian and Philippines Claims............................................................185
A. Indonesia......................................................................................................185
B. The Philippines............................................................................................187
V. UNCLOS III.........................................................................................................189
VI. The LOSC and Archipelagic States.....................................................................191
A. Archipelagic States.......................................................................................191
B. Archipelagic Baselines.................................................................................193
C. The Legal Status of Archipelagic Waters....................................................195
D. Archipelagic State Practice..........................................................................197
i. Proclaimed Archipelagic States...........................................................198
ii. Archipelagic State Rights Over
Archipelagic Waters.............................................................................201
VII. Further Reading...................................................................................................202
9. Landlocked and Geographically Disadvantaged States................................................203
I. Introduction........................................................................................................203
II. Landlocked States and Access to the Sea............................................................206
A. Early Developments.....................................................................................206
B. UNCLOS 1....................................................................................................208
C. Post-UNCLOS I Developments..................................................................209
D. The LOSC.....................................................................................................210
III. Landlocked States and Rights of Navigation......................................................213
IV. Landlocked and Geographically Disadvantaged
States and Marine Resources...............................................................................215
A. Living Resources of the EEZ.......................................................................216
B. Living Resources of the High Seas..............................................................218
C. Mineral Resources of the Area....................................................................218
D. Marine Scientific Research and Transfer
of Marine Technology.................................................................................218
V. Further Reading...................................................................................................219
xvi Contents
10. Navigational Rights and Freedoms.............................................................................220
I. Freedom of the Seas and Navigational Rights
and Freedoms...................................................................................................220
A. Traditional Interests.................................................................................220
B. Contemporary Interests...........................................................................221
II. Customary International Law Prior to UNCLOS 1........................................222
A. Early State Practice...................................................................................222
B. The Corfu Channel Case..........................................................................224
III. UNCLOS I and the Geneva Conventions.......................................................225
A. The Work of the International Law Commission..................................225
B. UNCLOS 1................................................................................................227
IV. UNCLOS III and the LOSC.............................................................................228
V. Territorial Sea...................................................................................................229
A. Coastal State Rights in the Territorial Sea..............................................229
B. The Right of Innocent Passage................................................................230
C. Coastal State Rights and Duties Regarding
Innocent Passage......................................................................................233
i. Prevention of Passage......................................................................233
ii. Regulation of Passage......................................................................234
iii. Obligation not to Hamper Innocent Passage.................................235
iv. Sea Lanes and Traffic Separation Schemes.....................................236
D. The Rights of Foreign Flagged Vessels....................................................237
E. Warships...................................................................................................237
F. Nuclear Vessels and Vessels Carrying Hazardous
Substances................................................................................................238
G. Vessels in Distress.....................................................................................239
VI. High Seas..........................................................................................................240
VII. Exclusive Economic Zone................................................................................242
VIII. Further Reading...............................................................................................244
11. International Straits and Archipelagic Navigation.....................................................245
I. Recognising Rights of Navigation Through Straits.......................................245
A. The Corfu Channel Case..........................................................................246
B. The ILC and UNCLOS 1..........................................................................247
II. UNCLOS III Deliberations and the LOSC.....................................................249
A. The Straits Regime...................................................................................249
B. The Archipelagic Regime......................;..................................................250
III. International Straits.........................................................................................251
A. Categories of Straits.................................................................................251
B. The Regime of Transit Passage................................................................255
i. The Act of Transit............................................................................255
ii. Duties of Ships and Aircraft in Transit...........................................255
iii. Obligations of Strait States..............................................................256
iv. Regulation of Transit Passage..........................................................258
v. Enforcement of Strait State Laws and Regulations........................259
Contents xvii
C. Navigation in Specific International Straits...........................................260
i. Turkish Straits..................................................................................260
ii. Strait of Gibraltar............................................................................261
iii. Straits of Malacca and Singapore....................................................262
iv. Torres Strait......................................................................................263
v. Bering Strait.....................................................................................266
IV. Archipelagic Navigation..................................................................................268
A. Innocent Passage Within Archipelagic Waters.......................................269
B. Archipelagic Sea Lanes Passage...............................................................270
i. Navigation in the Normal Mode ...................................................271
ii. Navigation within Archipelagic Sea Lanes.....................................271
iii. Designation of Archipelagic Sea Lanes...........................................272
iv. Obligations while Undertaking Archipelagic Sea
Lanes Passage...................................................................................273
v. Obligations of the Archipelagic State.............................................274
C. State Practice Designating Archipelagic Sea Lanes................................275
V. Further Reading...............................................................................................277
12. Military Uses of the Oceans.........................................................................................278
I. Introduction.....................................................................................................278
II. Historical Overview.........................................................................................279
III. International Law and Naval Operations.......................................................280
A. Law of Naval Warfare...............................................................................280
B. United Nations-Sanctioned Naval Operations.......................................282
IV. Codification of the Law of the Sea..................................................................283
A. Work of the International Law Commission..........................................284
B. UNCLOS I and the Geneva Conventions...............................................285
C. UNCLOS III and the LOSC.....................................................................286
V. Navigational Rights and Freedoms.................................................................287
A. Innocent Passage by Warships.................................................................289
B. Transit Passage by Warships....................................................................292
C. Archipelagic Sea Lanes Passage by Warships..........................................295
D. EEZ Navigation by Warships...................................................................296
i. Military Survey Activities................................................................296
VI. Naval Operations at Sea...................................................................................297
A. United Nations Sanctioned Interdictions...............................................297
B. Proliferation Security Initiative...............................................................299
C. Weapons Testing and Military Manoeuvres...........................................300
D. Demilitarised and Nuclear Free Zones...................................................302
VII. Overflight by Military Aircraft........................................................................303
A. Air Defence Identification Zones............................................................305
VIII. Further Reading...............................................................................................306
13. Marine Resource Management...................................................................................308
I. Introduction.....................................................................................................308
II. Non-Living Marine Resources........................................................................310
A. Resource Potential....................................................................................310
XVlll
Contents
B. Internal Waters and Territorial Sea............................................................311
C. Continental Shelf and Exclusive Economic Zone.....................................311
D. The High Seas and Deep Seabed................................................................312
E. Joint Development......................................................................................313
III. Living Resources.................................................................................................315
A. Fisheries and the Tragedy of the Commons ............................................315
B. Pre-LOSC Developments...........................................................................315
C. 1958 Geneva Conventions..........................................................................318
D. LOSC Regime..............................................................................................320
i. Internal Waters, the Territorial Sea and
Archipelagic Waters............................................................................321
ii. Exclusive Economic Zone..................................................................321
iii. Continental Shelf................................................................................328
iv. The High Seas.....................................................................................328
v. Deep Seabed........................................................................................331
E. Species-Specific Rules.................................................................................332
i. Highly Migratory Species...................................................................332
ii. Marine Mammals...............................................................................332
iii. Anadromous Species..........................................................................336
iv. Catadromous Species.........................................................................336
F. Post-LOSC Developments..........................................................................337
i. High Seas Fishing...............................................................................337
ii. Fish Stocks Agreement.......................................................................340
iii. Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction........................................344
IV. Further Reading..................................................................................................345
14. Marine Scientific Research..........................................................................................346
I. Introduction........................................................................................................346
II. Development of the Regime for Marine Scientific Research............................348
A. Early History of Marine Scientific Research..............................................348
B. Marine Scientific Research and North-South
Tensions in the Post-WW II Period...........................................................349
C. The Pre-LOSC Regime for Marine Scientific Research.............................349
III. The LOSC Regime for Marine Scientific Research............................................351
A. General Provisions......................................................................................351
B. Internal Waters, Archipelagic Waters and the
Territorial Sea..............................................................................................353
C. Continental Shelf and Exclusive Economic Zone.....................................354
i. Hydrographie Surveying....................................................................357
ii. Scientific Research Installations and Equipment..............................358
D. High Seas.....................................................................................................360
E. Deep Seabed................................................................................................360
IV. Marine Scientific Research Under Other Regimes............................................361
V. Coastal State Legislation Concerning Marine
Scientific Research..............................................................................................363
VI. Further Reading..................................................................................................364
Contents xix
15. Marine Environmental Protection..............................................................................365
I. Introduction.....................................................................................................365
II. Sources and Type of Marine Pollution...........................................................366
III. The Legal Framework: LOSC and Regional Treaties......................................369
A. LOSC........................................................................................................369
B. Regional Treaties......................................................................................372
IV. Operational Vessel-Source Pollution..............................................................376
A. Operational and Accidental Vessel Pollution
Distinguished...........................................................................................376
B. LOSC and the IMO..................................................................................376
C. International Standards...........................................................................377
D. The MARPOL Jurisdictional Framework...............................................381
i. Flag States.........................................................................................381
ii. Port States........................................................................................381
E. The LOSC Jurisdictional Framework......................................................382
i. Flag States.........................................................................................382
ii. Port States........................................................................................383
iii. Coastal States...................................................................................384
iv. Enforcement Jurisdiction................................................................385
V. Accidental Vessel-Source Pollution.................................................................386
A. Safety of Shipping....................................................................................387
i. SOLAS..............................................................................................387
ii. Qualifications and Working Conditions
for Seafarers.....................................................................................388
iii. Preventing Collisions at Sea............................................................389
VI. Pollution Emergencies.....................................................................................390
A. Responding to Pollution Emergencies....................................................390
B. Coastal State Rights of Intervention.......................................................391
C. The Role of Salvors..................................................................................392
VII. Liability for Vessel-Source Pollution...............................................................393
A. State Responsibility..................................................................................393
B. Civil Liability............................................................................................394
i. Liability for Oil Pollution Damage.................................................395
ii. 1992 Civil Liability Convention......................................................395
iii. The 1992 Fund Convention............................................................397
iv. Liability for Other Pollution Damage............................................398
VIII. Seabed Pollution..............................................................................................399
A. Territorial Sea, EEZ and Continental Shelf............................................400
IX. Dumping at Sea...............................................................................................402
A. 1972 London Convention........................................................................402
B. 1996 Protocol...........................................................................................403
C. Jurisdiction and Enforcement.................................................................405
D. Ship Scrapping and Recycling.................................................................406
E. Regional Agreements...............................................................................406
XX Contents
X. Land-Based and Atmospheric Pollution........................................................407
A. 1995 Global Programme of Action.........................................................409
XI. Further Reading...............................................................................................411
16. Delimitation of Maritime Boundaries........................................................................412
I. Introduction.....................................................................................................412
A. Grisbádarna Arbitration...........................................................................414
B. Influence of Boggs...................................................................................414
II. Work of the International Law Commission.................................................415
III. Codification of the Law...................................................................................417
A. Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone.....................417
B. Convention on the Continental Shelf.....................................................417
IV. Early Cases........................................................................................................418
A. North Sea Continental Shelf Cases...........................................................419
B. Anglo-French Arbitration.........................................................................420
V LOSC................................................................................................................421
VI. The ICJ and Maritime Boundary Delimitation.............................................422
VII. Principles of Maritime Boundary Delimitation.............................................427
A. Delimitation Methodology......................................................................427
i. Territorial Sea...................................................................................428
ii. EEZ, Continental Shelf and Single
Maritime Boundaries......................................................................429
iii. Delimitation Beyond 200 nm.........................................................429
iv. Grey Zones .....................................................................................431
B. Territorial Sea Delimitations...................................................................431
C. Equitable Solution/Equitable Result.......................................................433
D. Equidistance and Median Lines..............................................................433
E. Relevant and Special Circumstances.......................................................434
i. Special Circumstances.....................................................................435
ii. Relevant Circumstances..................................................................436
iii. Islands..............................................................................................437
iv. Fishing..............................................................................................439
v. Oil Concessions...............................................................................440
F. Single Maritime Boundaries....................................................................440
VIII. Maritime Boundary Delimitation by Agreement..........................................441
A. Settled Maritime Boundaries..................................................................441
B. Joint Development Zones........................................................................442
IX. Further Reading...............................................................................................444
17. Maritime Regulation and Enforcement......................................................................445
I. Introduction.....................................................................................................445
II. International Law Regarding Enforcement Powers at Sea.............................447
A. Hot Pursuit...............................................................................................448
i. Case Law...........................................................................................449
ii. State Practice....................................................................................449
iii. Multilateral Hot Pursuit..................................................................450
Contents xxi
B. Use of Force.................................................................................................451
i. The LOSC and the Use of Force.........................................................452
ii. General Principles Regarding the Use of Force
at Sea During Peacetime....................................................................453
III. Enforcement Operations Within Particular Maritime Zones..........................455
A. Internal Waters............................................................................................456
B. Territorial Sea..............................................................................................457
i. Criminal Jurisdiction.........................................................................458
ii. Civil Jurisdiction.................................................................................458
iii. Territorial Sea of an International Strait...........................................459
C. Archipelagic Waters....................................................................................459
D. Contiguous Zone........................................................................................460
E. EEZ..............................................................................................................462
i. Matters Subject to EEZ Sovereign Rights..........................................462
ii. Matters Subject to EEZ Jurisdiction..................................................463
F. Continental Shelf........................................................................................464
G. FlighSeas.....................................................................................................465
IV. Specialist Regimes Relating to Maritime
Regulation and Enforcement.............................................................................466
A. Piracy...........................................................................................................466
B. Maritime Terrorism and Related Unlawful Acts.......................................468
C. Fisheries.......................................................................................................469
D. Transnational Crime...................................................................................470
V. Further Reading..................................................................................................472
18. Dispute Settlement in the Law of the Sea...................................................................473
I. Introduction........................................................................................................473
II. Dispute Settlement in International Law:
General Mechanisms..........................................................................................474
III. Dispute Settlement in the Law of the Sea: Pre-LOSC
Developments.....................................................................................................477
A. ILC Draft Articles on the Law of the Sea...................................................477
B. UNCLOSI...................................................................................................478
C. UNCLOS III................................................................................................479
IV. Dispute Settlement Under the LOSC.................................................................479
A. Jurisdictional Conditions...........................................................................480
B. Compulsory Dispute Settlement................................................................483
i. Applicable Law....................................................................................487
ii. Provisional Measures..........................................................................488
iii. Prompt Release...................................................................................489
C. Jurisdictional Limitations and Exceptions................................................491
D. ITLOS..........................................................................................................494
E. Annex V Conciliation.................................................................................499
F. Annex VII Arbitration................................................................................501
G. Annex VIII Special Arbitration..................................................................504
V. Further Reading..................................................................................................505
xxii Contents
19. Oceans Governance.....................................................................................................506
I. Introduction.....................................................................................................506
II. The Concept of Oceans Governance..............................................................507
A. Oceans Governance Defined...................................................................507
B. The Ecosystem Approach and Area-Based Management......................507
C. Area-Based Tools for Marine Management............................................510
D. Transparent and Participatory Decision-Making
Processes...................................................................................................513
E. Scientific and Other Cross-Disciplinary Influences...............................514
F. Normative Influences on Oceans Governance.......................................515
III. The Global Legal Framework for Oceans Governance..................................516
IV. The Policy Framework for Oceans Governance.............................................518
V. Norms and Principles of Oceans Governance...............................................520
VI. Institutions for Oceans Governance...............................................................525
VII. Regional, Sub-regional and National Oceans Governance............................529
A. UNEP Regional Seas Programme...........................................................529
B. European Union.......................................................................................530
C. Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation.......................................................532
VIII. Further Reading...............................................................................................533
Index......................................................................................................................................535
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Rothwell, Donald 1959- Stephens, Tim 1975- |
author_GND | (DE-588)120849437 (DE-588)1051065380 |
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author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Rothwell, Donald 1959- |
author_variant | d r dr t s ts |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV043463741 |
callnumber-first | K - Law |
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callnumber-raw | KZA1145 |
callnumber-search | KZA1145 |
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dewey-ones | 341 - Law of nations |
dewey-raw | 341.4/5 |
dewey-search | 341.4/5 |
dewey-sort | 3341.4 15 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | Second edition |
format | Book |
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genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV043463741 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:26:27Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781782256847 |
language | English |
lccn | 015042535 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-028880911 |
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physical | xlviii, 553 Seiten Diagramm |
publishDate | 2016 |
publishDateSearch | 2016 |
publishDateSort | 2016 |
publisher | Hart Publishing |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Rothwell, Donald 1959- Verfasser (DE-588)120849437 aut The international law of the sea Donald R Rothwell and Tim Stephens Second edition Oxford ; Portland, Oregon Hart Publishing 2016 xlviii, 553 Seiten Diagramm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Law of the sea Maritime law Seevölkerrecht (DE-588)4132788-3 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Seevölkerrecht (DE-588)4132788-3 s b DE-604 Stephens, Tim 1975- Verfasser (DE-588)1051065380 aut Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, MOBI 978-1-78225-685-4 Gefolgt von Rothwell, Donald The international law of the sea Third edtion 2023 9781509958382 9781509958399 9781509958405 LoC Fremddatenuebernahme application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028880911&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028880911&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Rothwell, Donald 1959- Stephens, Tim 1975- The international law of the sea Law of the sea Maritime law Seevölkerrecht (DE-588)4132788-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4132788-3 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | The international law of the sea |
title_auth | The international law of the sea |
title_exact_search | The international law of the sea |
title_full | The international law of the sea Donald R Rothwell and Tim Stephens |
title_fullStr | The international law of the sea Donald R Rothwell and Tim Stephens |
title_full_unstemmed | The international law of the sea Donald R Rothwell and Tim Stephens |
title_new | Rothwell, Donald The international law of the sea |
title_short | The international law of the sea |
title_sort | the international law of the sea |
topic | Law of the sea Maritime law Seevölkerrecht (DE-588)4132788-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Law of the sea Maritime law Seevölkerrecht Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028880911&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028880911&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT rothwelldonald theinternationallawofthesea AT stephenstim theinternationallawofthesea |
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Inhaltsverzeichnis