Fr. 210.00

Legal Regime of Straits - Contemporary Challenges and Solutions

English · Hardback

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Description

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"The right of transit passage in straits and the analogous right of archipelagic sea lanes passage in archipelagic States, negotiated in the 1970s and embodied in the 1982 UNCLOS, sought to approximate the freedom of navigation and overflight while expressly recognizing the sovereignty or jurisdiction of the coastal State over the waters concerned. However, the allocation of rights and duties of the coastal State and third States is open to interpretation. Recent developments in State practice, such as Australia's requirement of compulsory pilotage in the Torres Strait, the bridge across the Great Belt and the proposals for a bridge across the Strait of Messina, the enhanced environmental standards applicable in the Strait of Bonifacio and Canada's claims over the Arctic Route, make it necessary to reassess the whole common law of straits. The Legal Regime of Straits examines the complex relationship between the coastal State and the international community"--

List of contents










Introduction; Part I. Law of Peace and Law of War: 1.1. General; 1.2. Treaty regimes; 1.3. A law of war for straits?; Part II. Right of Transit Passage Ratione Loci: Straits Used for International Navigation: 2. Applicability of the right of transit passage under UNCLOS Part III - Exclusions: 3. Applicability of the right of transit under Part III - straits used for international navigation defined; Part III. Right of Transit Ratione Materiae: Definition of Transit Passage: 4. Transit passage and other passage rights; 5. Transit passage defined; Part IV. Allocation of Jurisdiction over the Right of Transit Passage and Archipelagic Sea Lanes Passage: 6. Sovereignty of states bordering straits and archipelagic states; 7. Limitations to the sovereignty of states bordering straits and archipelagic states: rights and duties of coastal states; 8. Duties of ships and aircraft in transit; 9. Striking a balance between the sovereignty of states bordering straits and the right of transit; Part V. International Co-operation for the Safety of Navigation and the Prevention, Reduction and Control of Pollution in Straits: 10. Preliminary remarks and genesis of Article 43 of the UNCLOS; 11. Scope of Article 43: interpretation and suggested implementation; 12. Co-operative schemes: the special case of the Straits of Malacca and Singapore; Part VI. Multiple Regimes for Straits?; 13. UNCLOS as general framework; 14. Marine Protected Areas; Part VII. Conclusion: 15. Straits and dispute settlement; 16. Transit passage and customary law; 17. Concluding remarks.

About the author

Hugo Caminos is a former judge (1996–2011) at the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea and a member of the Institut de Droit International. He was Deputy Director of the Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations for the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea and Legal Counsel for the Organization of American States.Vincent P. Cogliati-Bantz holds a doctorate in international law from the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva. He lectures on the law of the sea, international organisations, European Union law and comparative law at the TC Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland, Australia.

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