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This important Research Handbook provides a guide to navigating the
tangled array of laws and policies available to counter the
multiple threats of ocean acidification. It investigates the
limitations and opportunities for addressing ocean acidification
under global governance frameworks, including multilateral
environmental agreements, law of the sea and human rights
instruments. The book also describes regional and national
approaches and challenges in responding to ocean acidification. The
special vulnerabilities of the Arctic, Antarctic and South Pacific
are highlighted. Limited responses by regional sea programmes and
regional fisheries management organizations are summarized. Case
studies are provided from Australia, Brazil, China and the United
States. This discerning Research Handbook will be a welcome read
for policy makers and students with an interest in the laws and
policies of marine governance and climate change. This will also be
an ideal read for those who are interested in the pressing
environmental issues facing the world community.
In Regional Co-operation and Protection of the Marine Environment
under International Law: The Black Sea, Nilufer Oral examines the
regional co-operation mechanism for protection and preservation of
the Black Sea marine environment within the framework of
international law, and subsequently identifies the necessary
components for a robust regional regime based on best legal
practices.
The importance of straits, particularly those used in international
navigation, has been long recognized in international law. One of
the important debates during the Third United Nations Law of the
Sea Conference concerned the regime of passage through straits used
in international navigation. The result was the creation of a
multi-tiered legal framework of passage that included the entirely
a new "transit passage" regime. Although over thirty years have
passed since the adoption of the 1982 United Nations Convention of
the Law of the Sea, the vital role played by straits in the global
communications network continues to be surrounded by conflicts
between the interests of coastal states and shipping. Challenges
still exist to achieving the simultaneous global goals of secure
passage of vessels and protection of the marine environment. In
Navigating Straits: Challenges for International Law,
internationally recognized international law scholars provide
in-depth analysis of the legal challenges in straits concerning
security, piracy, safety and environmental protection. All readers
interested in international and law of the sea will find this
seminal volume of interest.
The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), signed in 1982
and going into force in 1994, was the product of intensive
international debates from the 1950s onward. UNCLOS continues to be
the subject of vital debates on new initiatives that seek to
clarify or expand the scope of the ocean regime. In Ocean Law
Debates: The 50-Year Legacy and Emerging Issues for the Years
Ahead, distinguished authors analyze the content of these debates,
providing both historical perspectives and keen analyses of
present-day issues. Several chapters focus on the contributions to
debates over half a century's time by the Law of the Sea Institute,
including the controversies involving maritime delimitation issues,
creation of marine fisheries law, and responses to the manifold
challenges posed by dramatic advances in science and technology.
Complementing these historical perspectives, a section of five
chapters offers critical discussion of today's movement to create a
regime to sustain biodiversity in the Area Beyond National
Jurisdiction. Finally, the volume offers diverse perspectives on
the implementation and judicial interpretation of UNCLOS,
international whaling regulation, Arctic regional issues, seabed
mining problems, the geopolitics of Marine Protected Area
declarations, and the role of the IMO in responding to climate
change.
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