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Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

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2008

Era2015

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Securing A Sustainable Future For The Oceans Beyond National Jurisdiction: The Legal Basis For An Integrated Cross-Sectoral Regime For High Seas Governance For The 21st Century, Rosemary Rayfuse, Robin M. Warner Jan 2008

Securing A Sustainable Future For The Oceans Beyond National Jurisdiction: The Legal Basis For An Integrated Cross-Sectoral Regime For High Seas Governance For The 21st Century, Rosemary Rayfuse, Robin M. Warner

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

The legal regime for the high seas is fragmented both sectorally and geographically and is incomplete. Governance, regulatory, substantive and implementational gaps in the legal framework serve to limit the effectiveness of the high seas regime in securing a sustainable future for the conservation and use of the high seas environment and its resources. A global approach to further developing the high seas regime based on the concept of international public trusteeship for the oceans beyond national jurisdiction could foster environmentally responsible use of of the high seas and its resources and ensure the application of modern conservation principles and …


Current Legal Developments: The Arctic, Clive H. Schofield, Tavis Potts Jan 2008

Current Legal Developments: The Arctic, Clive H. Schofield, Tavis Potts

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

The planting of a flag in a titanium canister on the seabed at the North Pole in August 2007 on the part of the Russian Federation and efforts by the other Arctic Ocean littoral states to reinforce their territorial and, particularly, maritime jurisdictional claims in the region, led to the Arctic becoming the focus of considerable global media attention in recent months. Much of this coverage has been alarmist in tone, replete with tales of a “scramble” or “race” for the Arctic, talk of an Arctic “land-grab”, and unease over a resultant Arctic resource “gold rush”. Although some of the …