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Contributing Authors Include John U. Nef, Andrea Chiti-Batelli,
George W. Shepherd, Jr., Arthur E. Morgan, M. R. Masani, And Z. A.
Suleri.
Contributing Authors Include Fenner Brockway, Peter Krehel, Philip
Amram, And Many Others.
Contributing Authors Include Lewis Mumford, Lewis A. Coser, Henry
Jacoby, David Riesman And Others.
Contributing Authors Include Robert M. Hutchins, G. A. Borgese,
Marion Etcheverry, And Others.
Also Includes The Index For Volume 4. Contributing Authors Include
G. A. Borgese, Richard P. McKeon, And Mortimer J. Adler.
Contributing Authors Include Richard V. Carter, R. G. Tugwell, G.
A. Borgese, Robert Redfield And German Arciniegas.
Contributing Authors Include David Mitrany, James Avery Joyce,
Chloe R. Fox, And Others.
Contributing Authors Include John Boyd-Orr, David Bradley, R. G.
Tugwell, And Others.
Contributing Authors Include William O. Douglas, Charles G. Bell,
R. G. Tugwell, R. W. G. Mackay, Alan Wood And Others.
Contributing Authors Include Piero Calamandrei, R. W. G. Mackay,
James P. Warburg And Others.
Contributing Authors Include Fenner Brockway, Peter Krehel, Philip
Amram, And Many Others.
Contributing Authors Include G. A. Borgese, Max Rheinstein, R. G.
Tugwell, Vera Sandomirsky, Margaret Park Redfield, E. M. Borgese
And Charles G. Bell.
Contributing Authors Include Nicolo Carandini, Alan Cranston,
Marguerite Wardlow, Eyo Ita, George Haddad, And Firuz Kazemzadeh.
Since 1978, marine biologists, oceanographers, and specialists in
foreign policy, ocean development, international law, and strategic
studies have found the "Ocean Yearbook" series to be an invaluable
asset for research on one of the world's vital resources.
Volume 11 addresses the development of marine resources, along with
recent transportation, communication, marine science, and
technology developments. Twenty-four articles focus on such topics
as sea-based nuclear issues, regional cooperation, transport of
liquefied natural gas, along with an analysis of the UN conference
on Straddling and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks.
Published in cooperation with the International Ocean Institute and
Dalhousie University Law School, the "Ocean Yearbook provides a
comprehensive review of issues concerning the world's oceans-one of
humanity's most vital resources. Volume 16 addresses themes central
to ocean policy and research. Sections include Issues and
Prospects: UNICPOLOS, the 1st and 2nd sessions, and Japanese Ocean
Governance; Living Resources: Local Industry in a Global World:
Implications of Nova Scotia Tuna Ranching, and the Role of National
Fisheries Administrations; Maritime Transport: Container Vessels in
the New Millennium, and Chinese Maritime Law; Environmental and
Coastal Management: Challenges of Importing Principles of
Integrated Coastal and Ocean Management into Canada's Ocean Laws,
and Prospects for Pollution Reduction by Bioremediation in the
Marine Environment; Maritime Security: Maritime Cooperation in Asia
and the Pacific.
Selected Documents and Proceedings include:
Report of the International Ocean Institute 1999 - 2000
Oceans and the Law of the Sea Report of the Secretary General,
2000
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea Report
The Hamburg Declaration on the Ocean
The Fiji Declaration on Islands in the New Millennium
The Appendix includes a Directory of Oceans-related Institutions
Since its inception in 1978, the "Ocean Yearbook has proven an
invaluable research tool to marine biologists, oceanographers,
ocean development specialists, students of international law, as
well as analysts of foreign policy and international security.
Published in cooperation with the International Ocean Institute and
Dalhousie University Law School, "Ocean Yearbook 18"--a
commemorative volume honoring Elisabeth Mann Borgese--presents
original, peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and reference materials
from experts in such diverse fields as governance and sustainable
development, integrated coastal and ocean management, global and
regional cooperation, and international law and environmental
policy.
The "Ocean Yearbook" is an invaluable research tool for marine
biologists, oceanographers, students of international law, and
analysts of foreign policy and international security.
The Law of the Sea Conference finds itself steeped in issues of the
economics of mining, of fishing, of navigation, of technology and
technology-transfer. Without clarity about such issues, without
concepts and data readily available, it is not possible to form a
meaningful new law of the sea; no new order for the seas and oceans
can be built. The new law of the sea has to straddle law,
economics, and science in unprecedented ways.The people who have to
make this new law need the facts set in an orderly and logical
framework: not specialized facts in specialized books that are hard
to come by and go through but an overview of concepts and data in
their interaction.... The Ocean Yearbook is intended as a
contribution to the satisfaction of this newly felt need.
Ocean Yearbook 7 is the result of the efforts of the many
individuals and organizations. Here only a few can be cited. Thanks
are due to the various organizations and agencies that contributed
to this volume, both substantively and through their actions.
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