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This book analyses a selection of challenges in the implementation
and application of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea
(UNCLOS), focusing on several areas: international organizations,
fisheries, security, preserving marine biodiversity, dispute
settlement, and interaction with other areas of international law.
UNCLOS has been described as the Constitution for the Oceans. It
sets out the fundamental rights, obligations and jurisdictions of
States regarding the access to, uses and management of the oceans
and seas and their resources. It balances States' diverse and
sometimes conflicting interests, such as conflicting uses of space,
against navigational interests and the protection of the marine
environment. UNCLOS is the first global treaty to include
comprehensive obligations on the protection and preservation of the
marine environment, including the conservation of living marine
resources. These are often common or cross-border challenges, which
can only be addressed through international cooperation. The book
is divided into three thematic parts. The first concerns the role
of international organizations in ocean governance. It includes
twelve chapters covering a very diverse set of issues, both
materially and geographically, that demonstrate the importance of
coordinated actions on the part of multiple States for obtaining
harmonized solutions regarding the pursuit of activities in
maritime spaces (in connection with e.g. navigation, fisheries or
maritime security). The second part concerns the relevance of
dispute settlement mechanisms for understanding the international
law of the sea and the international legal framework within which
the actions of the great maritime powers take place. It is composed
of three chapters, examining stakeholders' role in dispute
settlement, the position taken by China and the Russian Federation
regarding international litigation in maritime spaces, and how the
South China Sea Award may be relevant to the debate on the
international legal concepts of rock and island. In turn, the third
part addresses current discussions on the conservation and
sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond
national jurisdiction. Its seven chapters report on the status quo
of the ongoing negotiations for a new international legal regime of
the high seas, and the establishment and operationalization of
environmental regimes for international maritime spaces.
This book analyses a selection of challenges in the implementation
and application of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea
(UNCLOS), focusing on several areas: international organizations,
fisheries, security, preserving marine biodiversity, dispute
settlement, and interaction with other areas of international law.
UNCLOS has been described as the Constitution for the Oceans. It
sets out the fundamental rights, obligations and jurisdictions of
States regarding the access to, uses and management of the oceans
and seas and their resources. It balances States' diverse and
sometimes conflicting interests, such as conflicting uses of space,
against navigational interests and the protection of the marine
environment. UNCLOS is the first global treaty to include
comprehensive obligations on the protection and preservation of the
marine environment, including the conservation of living marine
resources. These are often common or cross-border challenges, which
can only be addressed through international cooperation. The book
is divided into three thematic parts. The first concerns the role
of international organizations in ocean governance. It includes
twelve chapters covering a very diverse set of issues, both
materially and geographically, that demonstrate the importance of
coordinated actions on the part of multiple States for obtaining
harmonized solutions regarding the pursuit of activities in
maritime spaces (in connection with e.g. navigation, fisheries or
maritime security). The second part concerns the relevance of
dispute settlement mechanisms for understanding the international
law of the sea and the international legal framework within which
the actions of the great maritime powers take place. It is composed
of three chapters, examining stakeholders' role in dispute
settlement, the position taken by China and the Russian Federation
regarding international litigation in maritime spaces, and how the
South China Sea Award may be relevant to the debate on the
international legal concepts of rock and island. In turn, the third
part addresses current discussions on the conservation and
sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond
national jurisdiction. Its seven chapters report on the status quo
of the ongoing negotiations for a new international legal regime of
the high seas, and the establishment and operationalization of
environmental regimes for international maritime spaces.
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