The regime of islands in international law / / Hiran W. Jayewardene.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Publications on Ocean Development
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:Dordrecht, Netherlands ;, Boston, Massachusetts : : Martinus Nijhoff,, [1990]
©1990
Year of Publication:1990
Language:English
Series:Publications on Ocean Development
Physical Description:1 online resource (600 pages)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id 993582973304498
ctrlnum (CKB)4100000012037796
(MiAaPQ)EBC6737236
(Au-PeEL)EBL6737236
(OCoLC)1272990246
(EXLCZ)994100000012037796
collection bib_alma
record_format marc
spelling Jayewardene, Hiran W. (Hiran Wasantha), author.
The regime of islands in international law / Hiran W. Jayewardene.
Dordrecht, Netherlands ; Boston, Massachusetts : Martinus Nijhoff, [1990]
©1990
1 online resource (600 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Publications on Ocean Development
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Preface -- PART ONE: THE 'REGIME OF ISLANDS' -- Chapter 1: INSULAR FEATURES: DEFINITION ANDENTITLEMENT -- 1. Legal Definition of Islands and Other Natural Insular Features -- (1) Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Artificial Islands -- 2. The Entitlement of Islands to Areas of Maritime Jurisdiction -- (1) The Territorial Waters of Islands -- (2) The Contiguous Zones of Islands -- (3) The Continental Shelf of Islands -- (4) The Exclusive Economic Zones of Islands -- (5) Islands under Colonial Dependence, or Foreign Domination or Control -- PART TWO: THE EFFECT OF ISLANDS ON THE OUTER LIMITS OF NATIONAL JURISDICTION -- Chapter 2: ISLANDS AND BAYS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) Geographical Situations -- 2. Bays and Problems Occasioned by the Presence of Islands -- (1) Bays and Baselines -- (2) The Drawing of Baselines across Bays in the Presence of Islands -- (i) Problematical Island Situations -- (a) Screening Islands -- (b) Islands Forming the Headlands of a Bay -- (ii) Construction of the Closing Line -- (iii) Choice of Baselines -- Chapter 3: ISLANDS AND STRAIGHT BASELINES -- 1. General -- 2. Development of the Regime of Straight Baselines -- (1) Historical: Deliberations in Learned International Bodies and at the Hague Conference -- (2) The Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries Case of 1951 -- (3) The International Law Commission's Deliberations -- (4) The 1958 Geneva Conference on the Law of the Sea -- (5) The Third Conference on the Law of the Sea -- 3. Criteria for the Application of Straight Baselines -- (1) Geographical Conditions -- (i) Coastal Configurations -- (ii) Fringing Islands -- (2) Conformity with the General Direction of the Coast -- (3) The Link with the Land Domain: The Relevance of Economic and Historical Factors.
(4) Length of Baselines -- (5) Non-Exclusion of the Territorial Sea- High Seas/EEZ Link of Another State -- 4. The Drawing of Straight Baselines in the Presence of Islands and Related Features -- (1) Coastal Islands -- (i) Fringing Islands -- (ii) Island Clusters -- (iii) Islands Constituting a Promontory -- (iv) Individual Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Insular Features Forming Part of a Delta -- 4) Island States, Outlying Islands, Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines and Other Archipelagos -- (i) Island States -- (ii) Dependent Islands -- (iii) Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (iv) Other Archipelagos -- (5) Archipelagic States Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (6) Island Formations Extending across National Frontiers -- Chapter 4: REEFS AND ATOLLS -- 1. On Reefs and Atolls in General -- 2. Baselines in Relation to Reefs and Atolls -- (1) General -- (2) Law of the Sea Conferences and the Inclusion of Reefs and Atolls -- (i) Islands Situated on Atolls -- (ii) Islands Having Fringing Reefs -- Chapter 5: MID-OCEAN ARCHIPELAGOS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) The Feature -- (3) The Problem -- (4) The Rationale Underlying Archipelagic Claims -- (i) Political and Security Interests, Communications and the Exercise of the Public Law Jurisdiction of the Archipelagic Entity -- (ii) Historical Factors -- (iii) The Unity of the Archipelago as a Natural Feature -- (iv) Economic Considerations -- (v) Preservation of the Environment -- (vi) Factors Emphasized to Assuage International Concern -- (vii)Evaluation -- (5) The Countervailing Interests -- (6) The Evolution of the Archipelago Concept -- 2. Delimitation of the Baseline of the Territorial Sea Around Mid-Ocean Archipelagos: Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (1) General.
(2) The Juridical Basis for Delimiting Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (i) The Fictive Bay Concept -- (ii) The Normal Straight Baseline- Coastal Archipelago Analogy -- (iii) The Historic Waters Approach -- (iv) The Fictive Island Concept -- (v) The Case for a Special Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (3) The Problem of Defining a Mid-Ocean Archipelago: the Criteria for Determining the Applicability of an Archipelagic Straight Baseline System -- (i) The Definition of 'Archipelago' -- (a) The Natural Feature -- (b) Criteria Determining the Requisite Cohesiveness of the Features -- (ii) The Geopolitical Scope of the Regime -- (a) The Question of Archipelagos Constituting Part of a Mainland State: State Archipelagos -- (b) The Archipelagic Entity -- (4) The Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (i) General Definitive Criteria -- (a) The Location of Basepoints -- (b) The Geopolitical Factor - Inclusion of the Main Islands -- (c) The Test of Proportionality: The Water-Land Ratio -- (ii) Delimitation of Archipelagic Straight Baselines: Specific Restrictive Criteria -- (a) Limitations on the Length of Straight Baseline Segments -- (b) Conformity with the General Configuration of the Archipelago -- (c) The Integration of Low- Tide Elevations -- (iii) Accommodation of the Interests of Other States -- (a) Avoidance of Screening Effects -- (b) Non-Interference with Existing Rights -- (iv) Public Notification of Archipelagic Baselines -- 3. The Archipelagic Regime -- (1) Jurisdictional Limits in Outer Sea Areas -- (2) The Regime of Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Geographical Limits -- (ii) Juridical Status -- (3) Exceptions to the Principle of Sovereignty over Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Established Rights and Preferential Rights -- (a) Preferential Rights of Immediately Adjacent Neighbouring States.
(b) Rights of States under Existing Agreements, and Existing Submarine Cables -- (ii) Rights of Passage through Archipelagic Waters -- (a) The Right of Innocent Passage -- (b) The Question of Passage through Archipelagic Straits and the Regime of Archipelagic Sea-Lanes Passage -- (4) Some Examples of State Practice Relating to Archipelagos -- (i) Ecuador -- (ii) India -- (iii) The Maldives -- (iv) Fiji -- PART THREE: THE EFFECT GIVEN ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE DELIMITATION -- Chapter 6: ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE BOUNDARY RIVERS -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Rivers -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Navigable Rivers where the Thalweg Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Thalweg as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Thalweg in the Presence of Islands -- (a) The General Rule -- (b) Application of the Thalweg Rule where a River Splits into Several Navigable Channels as a Result of the Presence of Islands -- (c) Exceptions to the General Rule -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations in the Thalweg -- (ii) Alterations in the Thalweg and the Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurrence of Islands -- (a) The Emergence of New Islands -- (b) The Case of Islands which Disappear and Reappear -- (c) 'Mobile Islands' -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- (a) Islands Becoming Joined to a River Bank -- (b) Islands Becoming Joined to Each Other -- (c) Accretions to Islands -- (iii) Fission: An Island is Split into Two or More Parts -- 4. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Medium Filum Aquae Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Medium Filum Aquae as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Medium Filum Aquae in the Presence of Islands.
(a) Construction of the Median Line in the Presence of Islands -- (b) Allocation of Sovereignty over Islands: The General Rule -- (c) Islands Located in the Middle of a River -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations of the Medium Filum Aquae -- (ii) Alterations in the Medium Filum Aquae: The Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurence of Islands -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- 5. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Bank Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) Utilization of the Bank as the Boundary -- (a) Where the Boundary is Constituted by the Banks of the River -- (b) Where the Boundary is Constituted by One Bank -- (c) The Definition of 'Bank' -- (ii) Utilization of the Bank as a Boundary: Determination of the Status of Islands -- (iii) Changes in the Geographical Situation: Alterations of the Bank and Insular Geography -- 6. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where Other Methods of Delimitation are Utilized -- (1) General -- (2) Delimitation According to Straight Line Segments: The Treatment of Islands -- (3) Ad Hoc Treatment -- Chapter 7: ISLANDS IN INTERNATIONAL LAKES -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- (1) The Treatment of Islands in International Lakes where the Median Line Constitutes the Boundary -- (i) Methods of Delimiting Median Line Boundaries in Lakes -- (a) A Line Being at All Points Equally Distant fromEach Shore: The 'Landman's Median' -- (b) A Line Following the General Lines of the Shore Dividing the Surface of the Water Area as Nearly as Practicable into Two Equal Parts: An Approximate Median.
(c) A Line Along the Mid-Channel Dividing theNavigable Portion of the Lake, and Being at All Points Equally Distant from the Shoal Water on Each Shore: The Navigable Median.
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Islands Law and legislation.
0-7923-0130-7
language English
format eBook
author Jayewardene, Hiran W.
spellingShingle Jayewardene, Hiran W.
The regime of islands in international law /
Publications on Ocean Development
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Preface -- PART ONE: THE 'REGIME OF ISLANDS' -- Chapter 1: INSULAR FEATURES: DEFINITION ANDENTITLEMENT -- 1. Legal Definition of Islands and Other Natural Insular Features -- (1) Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Artificial Islands -- 2. The Entitlement of Islands to Areas of Maritime Jurisdiction -- (1) The Territorial Waters of Islands -- (2) The Contiguous Zones of Islands -- (3) The Continental Shelf of Islands -- (4) The Exclusive Economic Zones of Islands -- (5) Islands under Colonial Dependence, or Foreign Domination or Control -- PART TWO: THE EFFECT OF ISLANDS ON THE OUTER LIMITS OF NATIONAL JURISDICTION -- Chapter 2: ISLANDS AND BAYS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) Geographical Situations -- 2. Bays and Problems Occasioned by the Presence of Islands -- (1) Bays and Baselines -- (2) The Drawing of Baselines across Bays in the Presence of Islands -- (i) Problematical Island Situations -- (a) Screening Islands -- (b) Islands Forming the Headlands of a Bay -- (ii) Construction of the Closing Line -- (iii) Choice of Baselines -- Chapter 3: ISLANDS AND STRAIGHT BASELINES -- 1. General -- 2. Development of the Regime of Straight Baselines -- (1) Historical: Deliberations in Learned International Bodies and at the Hague Conference -- (2) The Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries Case of 1951 -- (3) The International Law Commission's Deliberations -- (4) The 1958 Geneva Conference on the Law of the Sea -- (5) The Third Conference on the Law of the Sea -- 3. Criteria for the Application of Straight Baselines -- (1) Geographical Conditions -- (i) Coastal Configurations -- (ii) Fringing Islands -- (2) Conformity with the General Direction of the Coast -- (3) The Link with the Land Domain: The Relevance of Economic and Historical Factors.
(4) Length of Baselines -- (5) Non-Exclusion of the Territorial Sea- High Seas/EEZ Link of Another State -- 4. The Drawing of Straight Baselines in the Presence of Islands and Related Features -- (1) Coastal Islands -- (i) Fringing Islands -- (ii) Island Clusters -- (iii) Islands Constituting a Promontory -- (iv) Individual Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Insular Features Forming Part of a Delta -- 4) Island States, Outlying Islands, Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines and Other Archipelagos -- (i) Island States -- (ii) Dependent Islands -- (iii) Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (iv) Other Archipelagos -- (5) Archipelagic States Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (6) Island Formations Extending across National Frontiers -- Chapter 4: REEFS AND ATOLLS -- 1. On Reefs and Atolls in General -- 2. Baselines in Relation to Reefs and Atolls -- (1) General -- (2) Law of the Sea Conferences and the Inclusion of Reefs and Atolls -- (i) Islands Situated on Atolls -- (ii) Islands Having Fringing Reefs -- Chapter 5: MID-OCEAN ARCHIPELAGOS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) The Feature -- (3) The Problem -- (4) The Rationale Underlying Archipelagic Claims -- (i) Political and Security Interests, Communications and the Exercise of the Public Law Jurisdiction of the Archipelagic Entity -- (ii) Historical Factors -- (iii) The Unity of the Archipelago as a Natural Feature -- (iv) Economic Considerations -- (v) Preservation of the Environment -- (vi) Factors Emphasized to Assuage International Concern -- (vii)Evaluation -- (5) The Countervailing Interests -- (6) The Evolution of the Archipelago Concept -- 2. Delimitation of the Baseline of the Territorial Sea Around Mid-Ocean Archipelagos: Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (1) General.
(2) The Juridical Basis for Delimiting Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (i) The Fictive Bay Concept -- (ii) The Normal Straight Baseline- Coastal Archipelago Analogy -- (iii) The Historic Waters Approach -- (iv) The Fictive Island Concept -- (v) The Case for a Special Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (3) The Problem of Defining a Mid-Ocean Archipelago: the Criteria for Determining the Applicability of an Archipelagic Straight Baseline System -- (i) The Definition of 'Archipelago' -- (a) The Natural Feature -- (b) Criteria Determining the Requisite Cohesiveness of the Features -- (ii) The Geopolitical Scope of the Regime -- (a) The Question of Archipelagos Constituting Part of a Mainland State: State Archipelagos -- (b) The Archipelagic Entity -- (4) The Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (i) General Definitive Criteria -- (a) The Location of Basepoints -- (b) The Geopolitical Factor - Inclusion of the Main Islands -- (c) The Test of Proportionality: The Water-Land Ratio -- (ii) Delimitation of Archipelagic Straight Baselines: Specific Restrictive Criteria -- (a) Limitations on the Length of Straight Baseline Segments -- (b) Conformity with the General Configuration of the Archipelago -- (c) The Integration of Low- Tide Elevations -- (iii) Accommodation of the Interests of Other States -- (a) Avoidance of Screening Effects -- (b) Non-Interference with Existing Rights -- (iv) Public Notification of Archipelagic Baselines -- 3. The Archipelagic Regime -- (1) Jurisdictional Limits in Outer Sea Areas -- (2) The Regime of Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Geographical Limits -- (ii) Juridical Status -- (3) Exceptions to the Principle of Sovereignty over Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Established Rights and Preferential Rights -- (a) Preferential Rights of Immediately Adjacent Neighbouring States.
(b) Rights of States under Existing Agreements, and Existing Submarine Cables -- (ii) Rights of Passage through Archipelagic Waters -- (a) The Right of Innocent Passage -- (b) The Question of Passage through Archipelagic Straits and the Regime of Archipelagic Sea-Lanes Passage -- (4) Some Examples of State Practice Relating to Archipelagos -- (i) Ecuador -- (ii) India -- (iii) The Maldives -- (iv) Fiji -- PART THREE: THE EFFECT GIVEN ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE DELIMITATION -- Chapter 6: ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE BOUNDARY RIVERS -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Rivers -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Navigable Rivers where the Thalweg Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Thalweg as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Thalweg in the Presence of Islands -- (a) The General Rule -- (b) Application of the Thalweg Rule where a River Splits into Several Navigable Channels as a Result of the Presence of Islands -- (c) Exceptions to the General Rule -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations in the Thalweg -- (ii) Alterations in the Thalweg and the Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurrence of Islands -- (a) The Emergence of New Islands -- (b) The Case of Islands which Disappear and Reappear -- (c) 'Mobile Islands' -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- (a) Islands Becoming Joined to a River Bank -- (b) Islands Becoming Joined to Each Other -- (c) Accretions to Islands -- (iii) Fission: An Island is Split into Two or More Parts -- 4. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Medium Filum Aquae Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Medium Filum Aquae as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Medium Filum Aquae in the Presence of Islands.
(a) Construction of the Median Line in the Presence of Islands -- (b) Allocation of Sovereignty over Islands: The General Rule -- (c) Islands Located in the Middle of a River -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations of the Medium Filum Aquae -- (ii) Alterations in the Medium Filum Aquae: The Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurence of Islands -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- 5. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Bank Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) Utilization of the Bank as the Boundary -- (a) Where the Boundary is Constituted by the Banks of the River -- (b) Where the Boundary is Constituted by One Bank -- (c) The Definition of 'Bank' -- (ii) Utilization of the Bank as a Boundary: Determination of the Status of Islands -- (iii) Changes in the Geographical Situation: Alterations of the Bank and Insular Geography -- 6. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where Other Methods of Delimitation are Utilized -- (1) General -- (2) Delimitation According to Straight Line Segments: The Treatment of Islands -- (3) Ad Hoc Treatment -- Chapter 7: ISLANDS IN INTERNATIONAL LAKES -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- (1) The Treatment of Islands in International Lakes where the Median Line Constitutes the Boundary -- (i) Methods of Delimiting Median Line Boundaries in Lakes -- (a) A Line Being at All Points Equally Distant fromEach Shore: The 'Landman's Median' -- (b) A Line Following the General Lines of the Shore Dividing the Surface of the Water Area as Nearly as Practicable into Two Equal Parts: An Approximate Median.
(c) A Line Along the Mid-Channel Dividing theNavigable Portion of the Lake, and Being at All Points Equally Distant from the Shoal Water on Each Shore: The Navigable Median.
author_facet Jayewardene, Hiran W.
author_variant h w j hw hwj
author_fuller (Hiran Wasantha),
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Jayewardene, Hiran W.
title The regime of islands in international law /
title_full The regime of islands in international law / Hiran W. Jayewardene.
title_fullStr The regime of islands in international law / Hiran W. Jayewardene.
title_full_unstemmed The regime of islands in international law / Hiran W. Jayewardene.
title_auth The regime of islands in international law /
title_new The regime of islands in international law /
title_sort the regime of islands in international law /
series Publications on Ocean Development
series2 Publications on Ocean Development
publisher Martinus Nijhoff,
publishDate 1990
physical 1 online resource (600 pages)
contents Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Preface -- PART ONE: THE 'REGIME OF ISLANDS' -- Chapter 1: INSULAR FEATURES: DEFINITION ANDENTITLEMENT -- 1. Legal Definition of Islands and Other Natural Insular Features -- (1) Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Artificial Islands -- 2. The Entitlement of Islands to Areas of Maritime Jurisdiction -- (1) The Territorial Waters of Islands -- (2) The Contiguous Zones of Islands -- (3) The Continental Shelf of Islands -- (4) The Exclusive Economic Zones of Islands -- (5) Islands under Colonial Dependence, or Foreign Domination or Control -- PART TWO: THE EFFECT OF ISLANDS ON THE OUTER LIMITS OF NATIONAL JURISDICTION -- Chapter 2: ISLANDS AND BAYS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) Geographical Situations -- 2. Bays and Problems Occasioned by the Presence of Islands -- (1) Bays and Baselines -- (2) The Drawing of Baselines across Bays in the Presence of Islands -- (i) Problematical Island Situations -- (a) Screening Islands -- (b) Islands Forming the Headlands of a Bay -- (ii) Construction of the Closing Line -- (iii) Choice of Baselines -- Chapter 3: ISLANDS AND STRAIGHT BASELINES -- 1. General -- 2. Development of the Regime of Straight Baselines -- (1) Historical: Deliberations in Learned International Bodies and at the Hague Conference -- (2) The Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries Case of 1951 -- (3) The International Law Commission's Deliberations -- (4) The 1958 Geneva Conference on the Law of the Sea -- (5) The Third Conference on the Law of the Sea -- 3. Criteria for the Application of Straight Baselines -- (1) Geographical Conditions -- (i) Coastal Configurations -- (ii) Fringing Islands -- (2) Conformity with the General Direction of the Coast -- (3) The Link with the Land Domain: The Relevance of Economic and Historical Factors.
(4) Length of Baselines -- (5) Non-Exclusion of the Territorial Sea- High Seas/EEZ Link of Another State -- 4. The Drawing of Straight Baselines in the Presence of Islands and Related Features -- (1) Coastal Islands -- (i) Fringing Islands -- (ii) Island Clusters -- (iii) Islands Constituting a Promontory -- (iv) Individual Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Insular Features Forming Part of a Delta -- 4) Island States, Outlying Islands, Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines and Other Archipelagos -- (i) Island States -- (ii) Dependent Islands -- (iii) Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (iv) Other Archipelagos -- (5) Archipelagic States Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (6) Island Formations Extending across National Frontiers -- Chapter 4: REEFS AND ATOLLS -- 1. On Reefs and Atolls in General -- 2. Baselines in Relation to Reefs and Atolls -- (1) General -- (2) Law of the Sea Conferences and the Inclusion of Reefs and Atolls -- (i) Islands Situated on Atolls -- (ii) Islands Having Fringing Reefs -- Chapter 5: MID-OCEAN ARCHIPELAGOS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) The Feature -- (3) The Problem -- (4) The Rationale Underlying Archipelagic Claims -- (i) Political and Security Interests, Communications and the Exercise of the Public Law Jurisdiction of the Archipelagic Entity -- (ii) Historical Factors -- (iii) The Unity of the Archipelago as a Natural Feature -- (iv) Economic Considerations -- (v) Preservation of the Environment -- (vi) Factors Emphasized to Assuage International Concern -- (vii)Evaluation -- (5) The Countervailing Interests -- (6) The Evolution of the Archipelago Concept -- 2. Delimitation of the Baseline of the Territorial Sea Around Mid-Ocean Archipelagos: Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (1) General.
(2) The Juridical Basis for Delimiting Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (i) The Fictive Bay Concept -- (ii) The Normal Straight Baseline- Coastal Archipelago Analogy -- (iii) The Historic Waters Approach -- (iv) The Fictive Island Concept -- (v) The Case for a Special Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (3) The Problem of Defining a Mid-Ocean Archipelago: the Criteria for Determining the Applicability of an Archipelagic Straight Baseline System -- (i) The Definition of 'Archipelago' -- (a) The Natural Feature -- (b) Criteria Determining the Requisite Cohesiveness of the Features -- (ii) The Geopolitical Scope of the Regime -- (a) The Question of Archipelagos Constituting Part of a Mainland State: State Archipelagos -- (b) The Archipelagic Entity -- (4) The Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (i) General Definitive Criteria -- (a) The Location of Basepoints -- (b) The Geopolitical Factor - Inclusion of the Main Islands -- (c) The Test of Proportionality: The Water-Land Ratio -- (ii) Delimitation of Archipelagic Straight Baselines: Specific Restrictive Criteria -- (a) Limitations on the Length of Straight Baseline Segments -- (b) Conformity with the General Configuration of the Archipelago -- (c) The Integration of Low- Tide Elevations -- (iii) Accommodation of the Interests of Other States -- (a) Avoidance of Screening Effects -- (b) Non-Interference with Existing Rights -- (iv) Public Notification of Archipelagic Baselines -- 3. The Archipelagic Regime -- (1) Jurisdictional Limits in Outer Sea Areas -- (2) The Regime of Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Geographical Limits -- (ii) Juridical Status -- (3) Exceptions to the Principle of Sovereignty over Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Established Rights and Preferential Rights -- (a) Preferential Rights of Immediately Adjacent Neighbouring States.
(b) Rights of States under Existing Agreements, and Existing Submarine Cables -- (ii) Rights of Passage through Archipelagic Waters -- (a) The Right of Innocent Passage -- (b) The Question of Passage through Archipelagic Straits and the Regime of Archipelagic Sea-Lanes Passage -- (4) Some Examples of State Practice Relating to Archipelagos -- (i) Ecuador -- (ii) India -- (iii) The Maldives -- (iv) Fiji -- PART THREE: THE EFFECT GIVEN ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE DELIMITATION -- Chapter 6: ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE BOUNDARY RIVERS -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Rivers -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Navigable Rivers where the Thalweg Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Thalweg as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Thalweg in the Presence of Islands -- (a) The General Rule -- (b) Application of the Thalweg Rule where a River Splits into Several Navigable Channels as a Result of the Presence of Islands -- (c) Exceptions to the General Rule -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations in the Thalweg -- (ii) Alterations in the Thalweg and the Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurrence of Islands -- (a) The Emergence of New Islands -- (b) The Case of Islands which Disappear and Reappear -- (c) 'Mobile Islands' -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- (a) Islands Becoming Joined to a River Bank -- (b) Islands Becoming Joined to Each Other -- (c) Accretions to Islands -- (iii) Fission: An Island is Split into Two or More Parts -- 4. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Medium Filum Aquae Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Medium Filum Aquae as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Medium Filum Aquae in the Presence of Islands.
(a) Construction of the Median Line in the Presence of Islands -- (b) Allocation of Sovereignty over Islands: The General Rule -- (c) Islands Located in the Middle of a River -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations of the Medium Filum Aquae -- (ii) Alterations in the Medium Filum Aquae: The Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurence of Islands -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- 5. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Bank Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) Utilization of the Bank as the Boundary -- (a) Where the Boundary is Constituted by the Banks of the River -- (b) Where the Boundary is Constituted by One Bank -- (c) The Definition of 'Bank' -- (ii) Utilization of the Bank as a Boundary: Determination of the Status of Islands -- (iii) Changes in the Geographical Situation: Alterations of the Bank and Insular Geography -- 6. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where Other Methods of Delimitation are Utilized -- (1) General -- (2) Delimitation According to Straight Line Segments: The Treatment of Islands -- (3) Ad Hoc Treatment -- Chapter 7: ISLANDS IN INTERNATIONAL LAKES -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- (1) The Treatment of Islands in International Lakes where the Median Line Constitutes the Boundary -- (i) Methods of Delimiting Median Line Boundaries in Lakes -- (a) A Line Being at All Points Equally Distant fromEach Shore: The 'Landman's Median' -- (b) A Line Following the General Lines of the Shore Dividing the Surface of the Water Area as Nearly as Practicable into Two Equal Parts: An Approximate Median.
(c) A Line Along the Mid-Channel Dividing theNavigable Portion of the Lake, and Being at All Points Equally Distant from the Shoal Water on Each Shore: The Navigable Median.
isbn 90-04-47924-4
0-7923-0130-7
callnumber-first J - Political Science
callnumber-subject JX - International Law
callnumber-label JX4148
callnumber-sort JX 44148 J394 41990
illustrated Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 300 - Social sciences
dewey-tens 340 - Law
dewey-ones 341 - Law of nations
dewey-full 341.448
dewey-sort 3341.448
dewey-raw 341.448
dewey-search 341.448
oclc_num 1272990246
work_keys_str_mv AT jayewardenehiranw theregimeofislandsininternationallaw
AT jayewardenehiranw regimeofislandsininternationallaw
status_str n
ids_txt_mv (CKB)4100000012037796
(MiAaPQ)EBC6737236
(Au-PeEL)EBL6737236
(OCoLC)1272990246
(EXLCZ)994100000012037796
carrierType_str_mv cr
hierarchy_parent_title Publications on Ocean Development
is_hierarchy_title The regime of islands in international law /
container_title Publications on Ocean Development
_version_ 1796652799336906753
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><collection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim"><record><leader>10687nam a2200433 i 4500</leader><controlfield tag="001">993582973304498</controlfield><controlfield tag="005">20231110220458.0</controlfield><controlfield tag="006">m o d | </controlfield><controlfield tag="007">cr cnu||||||||</controlfield><controlfield tag="008">220626s1990 ne a ob 001 0 eng d</controlfield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">90-04-47924-4</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(CKB)4100000012037796</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(MiAaPQ)EBC6737236</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(Au-PeEL)EBL6737236</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(OCoLC)1272990246</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(EXLCZ)994100000012037796</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="b">eng</subfield><subfield code="e">rda</subfield><subfield code="e">pn</subfield><subfield code="c">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="d">MiAaPQ</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="050" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">JX4148</subfield><subfield code="b">.J394 1990</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="082" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">341.448</subfield><subfield code="2">23</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="100" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Jayewardene, Hiran W.</subfield><subfield code="q">(Hiran Wasantha),</subfield><subfield code="e">author.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="4"><subfield code="a">The regime of islands in international law /</subfield><subfield code="c">Hiran W. Jayewardene.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Dordrecht, Netherlands ;</subfield><subfield code="a">Boston, Massachusetts :</subfield><subfield code="b">Martinus Nijhoff,</subfield><subfield code="c">[1990]</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">©1990</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (600 pages)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Publications on Ocean Development </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Preface -- PART ONE: THE 'REGIME OF ISLANDS' -- Chapter 1: INSULAR FEATURES: DEFINITION ANDENTITLEMENT -- 1. Legal Definition of Islands and Other Natural Insular Features -- (1) Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Artificial Islands -- 2. The Entitlement of Islands to Areas of Maritime Jurisdiction -- (1) The Territorial Waters of Islands -- (2) The Contiguous Zones of Islands -- (3) The Continental Shelf of Islands -- (4) The Exclusive Economic Zones of Islands -- (5) Islands under Colonial Dependence, or Foreign Domination or Control -- PART TWO: THE EFFECT OF ISLANDS ON THE OUTER LIMITS OF NATIONAL JURISDICTION -- Chapter 2: ISLANDS AND BAYS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) Geographical Situations -- 2. Bays and Problems Occasioned by the Presence of Islands -- (1) Bays and Baselines -- (2) The Drawing of Baselines across Bays in the Presence of Islands -- (i) Problematical Island Situations -- (a) Screening Islands -- (b) Islands Forming the Headlands of a Bay -- (ii) Construction of the Closing Line -- (iii) Choice of Baselines -- Chapter 3: ISLANDS AND STRAIGHT BASELINES -- 1. General -- 2. Development of the Regime of Straight Baselines -- (1) Historical: Deliberations in Learned International Bodies and at the Hague Conference -- (2) The Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries Case of 1951 -- (3) The International Law Commission's Deliberations -- (4) The 1958 Geneva Conference on the Law of the Sea -- (5) The Third Conference on the Law of the Sea -- 3. Criteria for the Application of Straight Baselines -- (1) Geographical Conditions -- (i) Coastal Configurations -- (ii) Fringing Islands -- (2) Conformity with the General Direction of the Coast -- (3) The Link with the Land Domain: The Relevance of Economic and Historical Factors.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(4) Length of Baselines -- (5) Non-Exclusion of the Territorial Sea- High Seas/EEZ Link of Another State -- 4. The Drawing of Straight Baselines in the Presence of Islands and Related Features -- (1) Coastal Islands -- (i) Fringing Islands -- (ii) Island Clusters -- (iii) Islands Constituting a Promontory -- (iv) Individual Islands -- (2) Low-Tide Elevations -- (3) Insular Features Forming Part of a Delta -- 4) Island States, Outlying Islands, Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines and Other Archipelagos -- (i) Island States -- (ii) Dependent Islands -- (iii) Archipelagic States not Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (iv) Other Archipelagos -- (5) Archipelagic States Qualifying for Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (6) Island Formations Extending across National Frontiers -- Chapter 4: REEFS AND ATOLLS -- 1. On Reefs and Atolls in General -- 2. Baselines in Relation to Reefs and Atolls -- (1) General -- (2) Law of the Sea Conferences and the Inclusion of Reefs and Atolls -- (i) Islands Situated on Atolls -- (ii) Islands Having Fringing Reefs -- Chapter 5: MID-OCEAN ARCHIPELAGOS -- 1. Introduction -- (1) General -- (2) The Feature -- (3) The Problem -- (4) The Rationale Underlying Archipelagic Claims -- (i) Political and Security Interests, Communications and the Exercise of the Public Law Jurisdiction of the Archipelagic Entity -- (ii) Historical Factors -- (iii) The Unity of the Archipelago as a Natural Feature -- (iv) Economic Considerations -- (v) Preservation of the Environment -- (vi) Factors Emphasized to Assuage International Concern -- (vii)Evaluation -- (5) The Countervailing Interests -- (6) The Evolution of the Archipelago Concept -- 2. Delimitation of the Baseline of the Territorial Sea Around Mid-Ocean Archipelagos: Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (1) General.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(2) The Juridical Basis for Delimiting Archipelagic Straight Baselines -- (i) The Fictive Bay Concept -- (ii) The Normal Straight Baseline- Coastal Archipelago Analogy -- (iii) The Historic Waters Approach -- (iv) The Fictive Island Concept -- (v) The Case for a Special Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (3) The Problem of Defining a Mid-Ocean Archipelago: the Criteria for Determining the Applicability of an Archipelagic Straight Baseline System -- (i) The Definition of 'Archipelago' -- (a) The Natural Feature -- (b) Criteria Determining the Requisite Cohesiveness of the Features -- (ii) The Geopolitical Scope of the Regime -- (a) The Question of Archipelagos Constituting Part of a Mainland State: State Archipelagos -- (b) The Archipelagic Entity -- (4) The Regime of Archipelagic Straight Baseline Systems -- (i) General Definitive Criteria -- (a) The Location of Basepoints -- (b) The Geopolitical Factor - Inclusion of the Main Islands -- (c) The Test of Proportionality: The Water-Land Ratio -- (ii) Delimitation of Archipelagic Straight Baselines: Specific Restrictive Criteria -- (a) Limitations on the Length of Straight Baseline Segments -- (b) Conformity with the General Configuration of the Archipelago -- (c) The Integration of Low- Tide Elevations -- (iii) Accommodation of the Interests of Other States -- (a) Avoidance of Screening Effects -- (b) Non-Interference with Existing Rights -- (iv) Public Notification of Archipelagic Baselines -- 3. The Archipelagic Regime -- (1) Jurisdictional Limits in Outer Sea Areas -- (2) The Regime of Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Geographical Limits -- (ii) Juridical Status -- (3) Exceptions to the Principle of Sovereignty over Archipelagic Waters -- (i) Established Rights and Preferential Rights -- (a) Preferential Rights of Immediately Adjacent Neighbouring States.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(b) Rights of States under Existing Agreements, and Existing Submarine Cables -- (ii) Rights of Passage through Archipelagic Waters -- (a) The Right of Innocent Passage -- (b) The Question of Passage through Archipelagic Straits and the Regime of Archipelagic Sea-Lanes Passage -- (4) Some Examples of State Practice Relating to Archipelagos -- (i) Ecuador -- (ii) India -- (iii) The Maldives -- (iv) Fiji -- PART THREE: THE EFFECT GIVEN ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE DELIMITATION -- Chapter 6: ISLANDS IN INTER-STATE BOUNDARY RIVERS -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Rivers -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Navigable Rivers where the Thalweg Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Thalweg as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Thalweg in the Presence of Islands -- (a) The General Rule -- (b) Application of the Thalweg Rule where a River Splits into Several Navigable Channels as a Result of the Presence of Islands -- (c) Exceptions to the General Rule -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations in the Thalweg -- (ii) Alterations in the Thalweg and the Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurrence of Islands -- (a) The Emergence of New Islands -- (b) The Case of Islands which Disappear and Reappear -- (c) 'Mobile Islands' -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- (a) Islands Becoming Joined to a River Bank -- (b) Islands Becoming Joined to Each Other -- (c) Accretions to Islands -- (iii) Fission: An Island is Split into Two or More Parts -- 4. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Medium Filum Aquae Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) The Medium Filum Aquae as a River Boundary -- (ii) Delimitation According to the Medium Filum Aquae in the Presence of Islands.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(a) Construction of the Median Line in the Presence of Islands -- (b) Allocation of Sovereignty over Islands: The General Rule -- (c) Islands Located in the Middle of a River -- (2) The Effect of a Change in the Geographical Situation -- (i) Alterations of the Medium Filum Aquae -- (ii) Alterations in the Medium Filum Aquae: The Effect on Islands -- (3) Changes in the Insular Geography -- (i) Changes in the Occurence of Islands -- (ii) Accretionary Changes -- 5. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where the Bank Constitutes the Boundary -- (1) General -- (i) Utilization of the Bank as the Boundary -- (a) Where the Boundary is Constituted by the Banks of the River -- (b) Where the Boundary is Constituted by One Bank -- (c) The Definition of 'Bank' -- (ii) Utilization of the Bank as a Boundary: Determination of the Status of Islands -- (iii) Changes in the Geographical Situation: Alterations of the Bank and Insular Geography -- 6. The Treatment of Islands in Rivers where Other Methods of Delimitation are Utilized -- (1) General -- (2) Delimitation According to Straight Line Segments: The Treatment of Islands -- (3) Ad Hoc Treatment -- Chapter 7: ISLANDS IN INTERNATIONAL LAKES -- 1. General -- 2. Methods of Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- 3. The Treatment of Islands in Delimiting Inter-State Boundaries in Lakes -- (1) The Treatment of Islands in International Lakes where the Median Line Constitutes the Boundary -- (i) Methods of Delimiting Median Line Boundaries in Lakes -- (a) A Line Being at All Points Equally Distant fromEach Shore: The 'Landman's Median' -- (b) A Line Following the General Lines of the Shore Dividing the Surface of the Water Area as Nearly as Practicable into Two Equal Parts: An Approximate Median.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(c) A Line Along the Mid-Channel Dividing theNavigable Portion of the Lake, and Being at All Points Equally Distant from the Shoal Water on Each Shore: The Navigable Median.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on print version record.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="650" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Islands</subfield><subfield code="x">Law and legislation.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="z">0-7923-0130-7</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Publications on Ocean Development </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="906" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">BOOK</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="ADM" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">2023-11-11 06:05:45 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="f">system</subfield><subfield code="c">marc21</subfield><subfield code="a">2021-10-09 22:12:07 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="g">false</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="AVE" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="i">Brill</subfield><subfield code="P">EBA Brill All</subfield><subfield code="x">https://eu02.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/uresolver/43ACC_OEAW/openurl?u.ignore_date_coverage=true&amp;portfolio_pid=5343408700004498&amp;Force_direct=true</subfield><subfield code="Z">5343408700004498</subfield><subfield code="b">Available</subfield><subfield code="8">5343408700004498</subfield></datafield></record></collection>