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International Maritime Security Law by James Kraska and Raul
Pedrozo defines an emerging interdisciplinary field of law and
policy comprised of norms, legal regimes, and rules to address
today's hybrid threats to the global order of the oceans. Worldwide
shipping commerce, fishing fleets, pleasure craft, and coastal
states are exposed to the menace of offshore terrorism, weapons of
mass destruction, piracy, smuggling, robbery, marine insurgency and
anti-access threats. Land-based institutions and maritime
constabulary forces operate within an increasingly integrated
network that blends elements of humanitarian law, human rights law,
criminal law, and law of the sea, with inspection regimes,
commercial enterprise, and marine safety and environmental
stewardship. The new authorities fuse together a global maritime
partnership among states, international organizations and
commercial interests to protect the maritime commons from the most
dangerous risks and hazards.
Conflict at sea has been transformed by disruptive technologies,
creating a dynamic and distributed operational environment that
extends from the oceans to encompass warfare on land, in the air,
outer space, and cyberspace. This raises choice of law decisions
that include the law of naval warfare and the law of armed
conflict, neutrality law, and the peacetime regimes that apply to
the oceans, airspace, outer space, and cyberspace. The
international law in networked naval warfare must contend with
autonomous vessels and aircraft, artificial intelligence, and
long-range precision strike missiles that can close the kill chain
at sea and beyond. The asymmetrical use of merchant ships and
blockchain shipping in naval operations, opening of the seabed as a
new dimension of undersea warfare, and sophisticated attacks
against submarine cables and space satellites pose new operational
and legal dilemmas. Navigating this broader conception of the
international law of naval warfare requires an understanding of
emerging operational capabilities and concepts throughout the
spectrum of conflict and the selection and integration of distinct
legal regimes. This book gives readers an understanding of the
discrete but overlapping legal frameworks connected to the law of
naval warfare and explores related concepts of seapower and naval
technology.
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