The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / / Barbara Kwiatkowska.
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Superior document: | Publications on ocean development ; Volume 14 |
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Place / Publishing House: | Dordrecht, The Netherlands ;, Boston ;, London : : Martinus Nijhoff Publishers,, [1989] ©1989 |
Year of Publication: | 1989 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Publications on ocean development ;
Volume 14. |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (426 pages) |
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Kwiatkowska, Barbara, author. The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / Barbara Kwiatkowska. Two hundred mile exclusive zone in the law of the sea Dordrecht, The Netherlands ; Boston ; London : Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, [1989] ©1989 1 online resource (426 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Publications on ocean development ; Volume 14 Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- Table of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- CHAPTER I: General characterization of the exclusive economic zone as a multifunctional resource zone -- 1. Basic jurisdictional framework of rights, freedoms andresponsibilities of states -- 1.1. The area of the EEZ and its socio-economic significance -- 1.2. The EEZ as a multifunctional zone -- 2. Exclusive economic zone-continental shelf parallelism -- 2.1. The EEZ regime as an extension of the CS regime -- 2.2. Judge Shigeru Oda's theory of EEZ-CS parallelism -- 2.2.1. The impact of the EEZ on the outer limit of the CS -- 2.2.2. The EEZ-inner CS parallelism -- 2.2.3. The inner CS-outer CS parallelism -- 2.2.4. Some observations -- 3. Land-locked and other geographically disadvantaged states -- 4. International co-operation and transfer of technology -- 5. The EEZ as customary international law -- CHAPTER II: Conservation and utilization of the living resources -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. Rights and duties of the coastal state -- 2.1. Basic principles and technical criteria, standards and methods -- 2.2. Practice of developing states -- 2.3. Practice of industrialized states -- 3. Foreign access -- 3.1. Character and duration of access -- 3.2. Apportionment of catch -- 3.3. Terms and conditions of access -- 3.4. Participation of LL/GDS -- 4. Sedentary species -- 5. Shared living resources -- 6. Highly migratory species -- 7. Anadromous and catadromous species -- 8. Marine mammals -- 9. Enforcement of fisheries regulations -- 10. Dispute settlement -- 11. Conclusion -- CHAPTER III: Other activities for the economic exploration and exploitation of the zone, and construction and use of artificial islands -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. Other activities for the economic exploration and exploitation of the zone. 3. General scope of rights and duties of the coastal state with regard to artificial islands -- 3.1. Legal nature of artificial islands and exclusive right of the coastal state -- 3.2. Exclusive jurisdiction of the coastal state -- 3.3. National practice of states -- 4. Rights and duties of the coastal state with regard to artificial islands versus other uses of the sea -- 5. Detailed principles and rules concerning artificial islands -- 5.1. Due notice of construction, and warning signals -- 5.2. Removal of abandoned or disused artificial islands -- 5.3. Safety zones -- 5.4. Designated areas concept -- 6. Conclusion -- CHAPTER IV: Conduct and promotion of marine scientific research -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General principles for the conduct of MSR and forinter national co-operation -- 3. Rights and duties of the coastal state and of third parties -- 3.1. Terms and conditions of the consent regime -- 3.2. MSR undertaken by or under the auspices of international organizations -- 3.3. Suspension and cessation of MSR -- 3.4. Rights of LLIGDS -- 3.5. Dispute settlement -- 4. National practice of states -- 5. Prospects for MSR -- 6. Conclusion -- CHAPTER V: Protection and preservation of the marine environment -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General principles for the PPME and for international co-operation -- 3. Jurisdiction of the coastal state -- 4. Basic framework of legislative and enforcement competence of the coastal and third states -- 5. State legislative competence -- 5.1. Pollution from ships -- 5.1.1. International rules and standards -- 5.1.2. National measures -- 5.1.3. Special areas -- 5.1.4. Ice-covered areas -- 5.2. Pollution from sea-bed activities and by dumping -- 6. State enforcement competence -- 6.1. Pollution from ships -- 6.1.1. Flag state enforcement -- 6.1.2. Port state enforcement -- 6.1.3. Coastal state enforcement. 6.1.4. Coastal state measures with regard to casualties -- 6.1.5. Safeguards -- 6.1.6. Assessment of enforcement with regard to pollution from ships -- 6.2. Pollution from sea-bed activities and by dumping -- 7. State responsibility and liability for pollution damage -- 8. Conclusion -- CHAPTER VI. Navigation and overflight, the laying of submarine cables and pipelines, and other internationally lawful uses of the sea -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General scope of the communications freedoms -- 2.1. LOS Convention -- 2.2. National practice of states -- 3. Balancing the communications freedoms and the coastal state rights -- 3.1. Principle of equivalence and reasonableness of competing uses -- 3.2. Coastal state rights -- 3.2.1. An overview -- 3.2.2. The laying of submarine cables and pipelines -- 3.2.3. Control exercised in the contiguous zone -- 3.2.4. The right of hot pursuit -- 3.3. Dispute settlement -- 3.4. Residual rights -- 4. Legal status of the EEZ -- 5. Conclusion -- APPENDIX 1: National legislation of states -- Exclusive economic zone -- Exclusive fishery zone -- APPENDIX 2: International conventions -- Multilateral -- Fisheries - global -- Fisheries - regional -- Environmental protection - Global -- Environmental protection - Regional -- Others -- Bilateral -- Fisheries -- Environmental protection -- U.S. Deepwater ports -- Others -- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Documents -- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Books, articles and studies -- INDEX OF NAMES -- GENERAL INDEX. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references and index. Economic zones (Law of the sea) 0-7923-0074-2 Two hundred mile exclusive economic zone in the new law of the sea. Publications on ocean development ; Volume 14. |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Kwiatkowska, Barbara, |
spellingShingle |
Kwiatkowska, Barbara, The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / Publications on ocean development ; Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- Table of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- CHAPTER I: General characterization of the exclusive economic zone as a multifunctional resource zone -- 1. Basic jurisdictional framework of rights, freedoms andresponsibilities of states -- 1.1. The area of the EEZ and its socio-economic significance -- 1.2. The EEZ as a multifunctional zone -- 2. Exclusive economic zone-continental shelf parallelism -- 2.1. The EEZ regime as an extension of the CS regime -- 2.2. Judge Shigeru Oda's theory of EEZ-CS parallelism -- 2.2.1. The impact of the EEZ on the outer limit of the CS -- 2.2.2. The EEZ-inner CS parallelism -- 2.2.3. The inner CS-outer CS parallelism -- 2.2.4. Some observations -- 3. Land-locked and other geographically disadvantaged states -- 4. International co-operation and transfer of technology -- 5. The EEZ as customary international law -- CHAPTER II: Conservation and utilization of the living resources -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. Rights and duties of the coastal state -- 2.1. Basic principles and technical criteria, standards and methods -- 2.2. Practice of developing states -- 2.3. Practice of industrialized states -- 3. Foreign access -- 3.1. Character and duration of access -- 3.2. Apportionment of catch -- 3.3. Terms and conditions of access -- 3.4. Participation of LL/GDS -- 4. Sedentary species -- 5. Shared living resources -- 6. Highly migratory species -- 7. Anadromous and catadromous species -- 8. Marine mammals -- 9. Enforcement of fisheries regulations -- 10. Dispute settlement -- 11. Conclusion -- CHAPTER III: Other activities for the economic exploration and exploitation of the zone, and construction and use of artificial islands -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. Other activities for the economic exploration and exploitation of the zone. 3. General scope of rights and duties of the coastal state with regard to artificial islands -- 3.1. Legal nature of artificial islands and exclusive right of the coastal state -- 3.2. Exclusive jurisdiction of the coastal state -- 3.3. National practice of states -- 4. Rights and duties of the coastal state with regard to artificial islands versus other uses of the sea -- 5. Detailed principles and rules concerning artificial islands -- 5.1. Due notice of construction, and warning signals -- 5.2. Removal of abandoned or disused artificial islands -- 5.3. Safety zones -- 5.4. Designated areas concept -- 6. Conclusion -- CHAPTER IV: Conduct and promotion of marine scientific research -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General principles for the conduct of MSR and forinter national co-operation -- 3. Rights and duties of the coastal state and of third parties -- 3.1. Terms and conditions of the consent regime -- 3.2. MSR undertaken by or under the auspices of international organizations -- 3.3. Suspension and cessation of MSR -- 3.4. Rights of LLIGDS -- 3.5. Dispute settlement -- 4. National practice of states -- 5. Prospects for MSR -- 6. Conclusion -- CHAPTER V: Protection and preservation of the marine environment -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General principles for the PPME and for international co-operation -- 3. Jurisdiction of the coastal state -- 4. Basic framework of legislative and enforcement competence of the coastal and third states -- 5. State legislative competence -- 5.1. Pollution from ships -- 5.1.1. International rules and standards -- 5.1.2. National measures -- 5.1.3. Special areas -- 5.1.4. Ice-covered areas -- 5.2. Pollution from sea-bed activities and by dumping -- 6. State enforcement competence -- 6.1. Pollution from ships -- 6.1.1. Flag state enforcement -- 6.1.2. Port state enforcement -- 6.1.3. Coastal state enforcement. 6.1.4. Coastal state measures with regard to casualties -- 6.1.5. Safeguards -- 6.1.6. Assessment of enforcement with regard to pollution from ships -- 6.2. Pollution from sea-bed activities and by dumping -- 7. State responsibility and liability for pollution damage -- 8. Conclusion -- CHAPTER VI. Navigation and overflight, the laying of submarine cables and pipelines, and other internationally lawful uses of the sea -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General scope of the communications freedoms -- 2.1. LOS Convention -- 2.2. National practice of states -- 3. Balancing the communications freedoms and the coastal state rights -- 3.1. Principle of equivalence and reasonableness of competing uses -- 3.2. Coastal state rights -- 3.2.1. An overview -- 3.2.2. The laying of submarine cables and pipelines -- 3.2.3. Control exercised in the contiguous zone -- 3.2.4. The right of hot pursuit -- 3.3. Dispute settlement -- 3.4. Residual rights -- 4. Legal status of the EEZ -- 5. Conclusion -- APPENDIX 1: National legislation of states -- Exclusive economic zone -- Exclusive fishery zone -- APPENDIX 2: International conventions -- Multilateral -- Fisheries - global -- Fisheries - regional -- Environmental protection - Global -- Environmental protection - Regional -- Others -- Bilateral -- Fisheries -- Environmental protection -- U.S. Deepwater ports -- Others -- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Documents -- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Books, articles and studies -- INDEX OF NAMES -- GENERAL INDEX. |
author_facet |
Kwiatkowska, Barbara, |
author_variant |
b k bk |
author_role |
VerfasserIn |
author_sort |
Kwiatkowska, Barbara, |
title |
The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / |
title_full |
The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / Barbara Kwiatkowska. |
title_fullStr |
The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / Barbara Kwiatkowska. |
title_full_unstemmed |
The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / Barbara Kwiatkowska. |
title_auth |
The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / |
title_alt |
Two hundred mile exclusive zone in the law of the sea Two hundred mile exclusive economic zone in the new law of the sea. |
title_new |
The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / |
title_sort |
the 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / |
series |
Publications on ocean development ; |
series2 |
Publications on ocean development ; |
publisher |
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, |
publishDate |
1989 |
physical |
1 online resource (426 pages) |
contents |
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- Table of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- CHAPTER I: General characterization of the exclusive economic zone as a multifunctional resource zone -- 1. Basic jurisdictional framework of rights, freedoms andresponsibilities of states -- 1.1. The area of the EEZ and its socio-economic significance -- 1.2. The EEZ as a multifunctional zone -- 2. Exclusive economic zone-continental shelf parallelism -- 2.1. The EEZ regime as an extension of the CS regime -- 2.2. Judge Shigeru Oda's theory of EEZ-CS parallelism -- 2.2.1. The impact of the EEZ on the outer limit of the CS -- 2.2.2. The EEZ-inner CS parallelism -- 2.2.3. The inner CS-outer CS parallelism -- 2.2.4. Some observations -- 3. Land-locked and other geographically disadvantaged states -- 4. International co-operation and transfer of technology -- 5. The EEZ as customary international law -- CHAPTER II: Conservation and utilization of the living resources -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. Rights and duties of the coastal state -- 2.1. Basic principles and technical criteria, standards and methods -- 2.2. Practice of developing states -- 2.3. Practice of industrialized states -- 3. Foreign access -- 3.1. Character and duration of access -- 3.2. Apportionment of catch -- 3.3. Terms and conditions of access -- 3.4. Participation of LL/GDS -- 4. Sedentary species -- 5. Shared living resources -- 6. Highly migratory species -- 7. Anadromous and catadromous species -- 8. Marine mammals -- 9. Enforcement of fisheries regulations -- 10. Dispute settlement -- 11. Conclusion -- CHAPTER III: Other activities for the economic exploration and exploitation of the zone, and construction and use of artificial islands -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. Other activities for the economic exploration and exploitation of the zone. 3. General scope of rights and duties of the coastal state with regard to artificial islands -- 3.1. Legal nature of artificial islands and exclusive right of the coastal state -- 3.2. Exclusive jurisdiction of the coastal state -- 3.3. National practice of states -- 4. Rights and duties of the coastal state with regard to artificial islands versus other uses of the sea -- 5. Detailed principles and rules concerning artificial islands -- 5.1. Due notice of construction, and warning signals -- 5.2. Removal of abandoned or disused artificial islands -- 5.3. Safety zones -- 5.4. Designated areas concept -- 6. Conclusion -- CHAPTER IV: Conduct and promotion of marine scientific research -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General principles for the conduct of MSR and forinter national co-operation -- 3. Rights and duties of the coastal state and of third parties -- 3.1. Terms and conditions of the consent regime -- 3.2. MSR undertaken by or under the auspices of international organizations -- 3.3. Suspension and cessation of MSR -- 3.4. Rights of LLIGDS -- 3.5. Dispute settlement -- 4. National practice of states -- 5. Prospects for MSR -- 6. Conclusion -- CHAPTER V: Protection and preservation of the marine environment -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General principles for the PPME and for international co-operation -- 3. Jurisdiction of the coastal state -- 4. Basic framework of legislative and enforcement competence of the coastal and third states -- 5. State legislative competence -- 5.1. Pollution from ships -- 5.1.1. International rules and standards -- 5.1.2. National measures -- 5.1.3. Special areas -- 5.1.4. Ice-covered areas -- 5.2. Pollution from sea-bed activities and by dumping -- 6. State enforcement competence -- 6.1. Pollution from ships -- 6.1.1. Flag state enforcement -- 6.1.2. Port state enforcement -- 6.1.3. Coastal state enforcement. 6.1.4. Coastal state measures with regard to casualties -- 6.1.5. Safeguards -- 6.1.6. Assessment of enforcement with regard to pollution from ships -- 6.2. Pollution from sea-bed activities and by dumping -- 7. State responsibility and liability for pollution damage -- 8. Conclusion -- CHAPTER VI. Navigation and overflight, the laying of submarine cables and pipelines, and other internationally lawful uses of the sea -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General scope of the communications freedoms -- 2.1. LOS Convention -- 2.2. National practice of states -- 3. Balancing the communications freedoms and the coastal state rights -- 3.1. Principle of equivalence and reasonableness of competing uses -- 3.2. Coastal state rights -- 3.2.1. An overview -- 3.2.2. The laying of submarine cables and pipelines -- 3.2.3. Control exercised in the contiguous zone -- 3.2.4. The right of hot pursuit -- 3.3. Dispute settlement -- 3.4. Residual rights -- 4. Legal status of the EEZ -- 5. Conclusion -- APPENDIX 1: National legislation of states -- Exclusive economic zone -- Exclusive fishery zone -- APPENDIX 2: International conventions -- Multilateral -- Fisheries - global -- Fisheries - regional -- Environmental protection - Global -- Environmental protection - Regional -- Others -- Bilateral -- Fisheries -- Environmental protection -- U.S. Deepwater ports -- Others -- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Documents -- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Books, articles and studies -- INDEX OF NAMES -- GENERAL INDEX. |
isbn |
90-04-48162-1 0-7923-0074-2 |
callnumber-first |
K - Law |
callnumber-label |
KZA1560 |
callnumber-sort |
KZA 41560 K853 41989 |
illustrated |
Not Illustrated |
dewey-hundreds |
300 - Social sciences |
dewey-tens |
340 - Law |
dewey-ones |
341 - Law of nations |
dewey-full |
341.448 |
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3341.448 |
dewey-raw |
341.448 |
dewey-search |
341.448 |
oclc_num |
1273001144 |
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The 200 mile exclusive zone in the new law of the sea / |
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Navigation and overflight, the laying of submarine cables and pipelines, and other internationally lawful uses of the sea -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. General scope of the communications freedoms -- 2.1. LOS Convention -- 2.2. National practice of states -- 3. Balancing the communications freedoms and the coastal state rights -- 3.1. Principle of equivalence and reasonableness of competing uses -- 3.2. Coastal state rights -- 3.2.1. An overview -- 3.2.2. The laying of submarine cables and pipelines -- 3.2.3. Control exercised in the contiguous zone -- 3.2.4. The right of hot pursuit -- 3.3. Dispute settlement -- 3.4. Residual rights -- 4. Legal status of the EEZ -- 5. 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