Dependent Archipelagos in the Law of the Sea.
Dependent Archipelagos in the Law of the Sea examines the archipelagic concept in international law of the sea with respect to dependent archipelagos, both coastal and outlying, and evaluates the contribution of state practice to solutions and developments.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden :
BRILL,
2013.
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Colección: | Publications on ocean development.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface and Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; List of Figures; Introduction; I. Archipelagos, the Archipelagic Concept and the Law of the Sea Convention; II. Dependent Coastal and Outlying Archipelagos: Definitional Aspects; III. The Scope and Structure of the Book; Chapter One The Development of the Archipelagic Concept in International Law of the Sea: From Straight Baselines to the Archipelagic Regime of the Law of the Sea Convention; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Proposals and Evolution of the Archipelagic Concept Prior to the Third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea.
- A. Early Proposals Regarding the Treatment of Archipelagos in International LawB. The Impact of the Fisheries Case upon the Evolution of the Archipelagic Concept; C. Proposals and Discussions on Archipelagos in the Aftermath of the Fisheries Case; I. Straight Baselines and Outlying and Coastal Archipelagos in the Discussions of the ILC; II. Straight Baselines and Archipelagos during UNCLOS I; III. The Regime of Enclosed Waters in the Discussions of the ILC and UNCLOS I; IV. Special Treatment of Archipelagos on the Basis of Historic Reasons in UNCLOS II.
- D. Factors Impeding the Acceptance of a Special Regime for Outlying Archipelagos: An Interplay of Geographic and Political Considerations1.3 Archipelagos and the Third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea; A. Political Developments Influencing UNCLOS III; B. Outlying Archipelagos and the Archipelagic Regime Adopted in UNCLOS III; I. Distinction on the Basis of the Political Status of Archipelagos; II. Conditions for the Application of the Archipelagic Regime: Archipelagic Definition vs. Quantitative Requirements; III. The Archipelagic Regime: A Regime to Satisfy Conflicting Interests.
- 1.4 Concluding Remarks: The Application of the Archipelagic Concept in the LOSC: Gains and LossesChapter Two The Application of Straight Baselines on the Basis of Article 7 LOSC and State Practice: Implications for Coastal Archipelagos; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Article 7 LOSC and Application of Straight Baselines in Localities where there is a 'Fringe of Islands along the Coast in Its Immediate Vicinity'; A. Rationale and Objectives for the Application of Straight Baselines to 'Fringes of Islands'
- B. Conditions for the Application of Article 7 to 'Fringes of Islands along the Coast in Its Immediate Vicinity'I. 'Fringe of Islands'; a. Background; b. Islands vs Article 121 (3) LOSC Rocks; c. Number of Islands; d. Compactness of the Group: Distances between the Islands; II. The Relationship between the Coast and the Fringe of Islands: 'Along the Coast in Its Immediate Vicinity'; III. Conditions Regarding the Application of the Straight Baselines System per se; a. Article 7 (2-5) LOSC; b. Maximum Length of Straight Baselines; IV. Some Guidance from International Courts and Tribunals.