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Full-Text Articles in International Law
Agenda: New Challenges For Environmental Protection: Second Sino-American Conference On Environmental Law, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Agenda: New Challenges For Environmental Protection: Second Sino-American Conference On Environmental Law, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
New Challenges for Environmental Protection: Second Sino-American Conference on Environmental Law (October 12-13)
Workshop held Sept. 18-19, 1989; conference held Oct. 12-13, 1989, in Boulder, Colorado.
Conference speakers included University of Colorado School of Law professors Daniel Barstow Magraw and Lawrence J. MacDonnell.
Contents of papers from workshop and conference:
To protect developing city by the enactment of local laws and regulations / Wu Zilin -- Legislative control of air pollution & water pollution of the P.R.China / Xiao Longan -- The law of natural conservation in China / Ma Xiang-cong -- 'Weighing environmental risks : EPA's unfinished business', Environment, vol. 30, no. 6, July/August 1988, p. 14-17, 34-39 / Richard Morgenstern, Stuart …
International Environmental Issues [Outline], Zheng-Kang Cheng, Daniel Magraw
International Environmental Issues [Outline], Zheng-Kang Cheng, Daniel Magraw
New Challenges for Environmental Protection: Second Sino-American Conference on Environmental Law (October 12-13)
2 pages.
Death Of A Treaty: The Decline And Fall Of The Antarctic Minerals Convention, Deborah C. Waller
Death Of A Treaty: The Decline And Fall Of The Antarctic Minerals Convention, Deborah C. Waller
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
On June 2, 1988, in Wellington, New Zealand, thirty-three states signed the Convention on the Regulation of Antarctic Mineral Resources. This agreement, the product of six years of negotiation, fills a significant gap in the Antarctic Treaty System: it provides rules governing the prospecting, exploration, and development of minerals in Antarctica. Recently, however, two Antarctic Treaty Consultative Parties--France and Australia--have refused to ratify the Minerals Convention, instead advocating a permanent ban on mineral activities in Antarctica. Their opposition thwarts plans for the ratification of the Minerals Convention. This Note provides an overview of the present Antarctic Treaty System, sets forth …