Listing 1 - 6 of 6 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Boundaries --- -Territorial waters --- -Continental shelf --- -Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- -Contiguous zones (Maritime law) --- Law of the sea --- Economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Territorial waters --- Continental margins --- Limit, Three-mile (Territorial waters) --- Marginal sea (Territorial waters) --- Maritime belt (Territorial waters) --- Territorial sea --- Three-mile limit (Territorial waters) --- Bodies of water --- Jurisdiction, Territorial --- Territory, National --- Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- Continental shelf --- Innocent passage (Law of the sea) --- Borders (Geography) --- Boundary lines --- Frontiers --- Geographical boundaries --- International boundaries --- Lines, Boundary --- Natural boundaries --- Perimeters (Boundaries) --- Political boundaries --- Borderlands --- Maps --- Map --- Maps. --- -Maps
Choose an application
Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- Innocent passage (Law of the sea) --- Territorial waters --- Limit, Three-mile (Territorial waters) --- Marginal sea (Territorial waters) --- Maritime belt (Territorial waters) --- Territorial sea --- Three-mile limit (Territorial waters) --- Bodies of water --- Jurisdiction, Territorial --- Territory, National --- Continental shelf --- Economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Law of the sea --- Free navigation in coastal waters of third states --- Innocent passage (Maritime law) --- Navigation of foreign ships through territorial seas --- Right of innocent passage (Maritime law) --- Contiguous zones (Maritime law) --- Maritime law
Choose an application
Dependent Archipelagos in the Law of the Sea examines the archipelagic concept in international law of the sea with respect to dependent archipelagos, both coastal and outlying. The monograph offers a thorough examination of the regime of straight baselines, and the implications arising from their application to archipelagos. It further analyses the practice of States with regard to the delimitation of the maritime zones of archipelagos, and assesses its value both as an element contributing to the interpretation of the Law of the Sea Convention - especially related to the application of article 7 - and as a factor leading to new developments in international law with an emphasis on customary law.
Archipelagoes --- Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- Territorial waters. --- Customary law. --- Customs (Law) --- Folk law --- Usage and custom (Law) --- Social norms --- Common law --- Time immemorial (Law) --- Limit, Three-mile (Territorial waters) --- Marginal sea (Territorial waters) --- Maritime belt (Territorial waters) --- Territorial sea --- Three-mile limit (Territorial waters) --- Bodies of water --- Jurisdiction, Territorial --- Territory, National --- Continental shelf --- Economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Innocent passage (Law of the sea) --- Law of the sea --- Contiguous zones (Maritime law) --- Territorial waters --- International law --- Law and legislation. --- Law, Primitive --- Traditional law
Choose an application
Now in a third, revised edition, Excessive Maritime Claims by J. Ashley Roach and Robert W. Smith is designed for law of the sea and maritime law specialists. The book draws on published governmental material in the public domain, specifically the U.S., and addresses recent progress in maritime security, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction by sea, piracy, and protection of underwater cultural heritage. As a result of significant developments in the law of the sea, primarily with reference to the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention, Excessive Maritime Claims provides up to date coverage of current affairs as well as introduce new topics such as: submarine cables, polar areas, environmental protection, sovereign immunity and sunken ships, and maritime law enforcement.
Territorial waters. --- Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- Economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Boundaries. --- Claims. --- Law of the sea --- United States --- Foreign relations. --- Claims --- International claims --- Private claims --- War claims --- Borders (Geography) --- Boundary lines --- Frontiers --- Geographical boundaries --- International boundaries --- Lines, Boundary --- Natural boundaries --- Perimeters (Boundaries) --- Political boundaries --- Economic zones (Maritime law) --- Exclusive economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Patrimonial sea (Law of the sea) --- Contiguous zones (Maritime law) --- Limit, Three-mile (Territorial waters) --- Marginal sea (Territorial waters) --- Maritime belt (Territorial waters) --- Territorial sea --- Three-mile limit (Territorial waters) --- Law and legislation --- Finance, Public --- Government liability (International law) --- Borderlands --- Territory, National --- Territorial waters --- Bodies of water --- Jurisdiction, Territorial --- Continental shelf --- Innocent passage (Law of the sea)
Choose an application
Law of nations: objects and subjects --- Intercontinental regions --- Economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Continental shelf. --- Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- Territorial waters. --- 351.824.11 --- 341.225 --- Continental shelf --- Territorial waters --- Economic zones (Maritime law) --- Exclusive economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Patrimonial sea (Law of the sea) --- Law of the sea --- Contiguous zones (Maritime law) --- Limit, Three-mile (Territorial waters) --- Marginal sea (Territorial waters) --- Maritime belt (Territorial waters) --- Territorial sea --- Three-mile limit (Territorial waters) --- Bodies of water --- Jurisdiction, Territorial --- Territory, National --- Innocent passage (Law of the sea) --- Continental margins --- Reglementering i.v.m. gas, electriciteit, water. Nucleaire reglementering. Reglementering i.v.m. energiebeleid. --- Internationaal zeerecht. Mare liberum. Vrije zee. Zeeengten --- Contiguous zones (Law of the sea). --- Economic zones (Law of the sea). --- 341.225 Internationaal zeerecht. Mare liberum. Vrije zee. Zeeengten --- 351.824.11 Reglementering i.v.m. gas, electriciteit, water. Nucleaire reglementering. Reglementering i.v.m. energiebeleid. --- Reglementering i.v.m. gas, electriciteit, water. Nucleaire reglementering. Reglementering i.v.m. energiebeleid
Choose an application
'The Struggle for Law in the Oceans' argues that by following a misleading isolationist narrative and not acceding to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), the United States has harmed and continues to harm its interests. The book makes a compelling case for acceding to UNCLOS at the earliest opportunity.
Law of the sea --- Freedom of the seas --- United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea --- Mare liberum --- Open seas (Law) --- Sea, Freedom of the --- Seas, Freedom of the --- Mare clausum --- Law and legislation --- Convención de las Naciones Unidas sobre el derecho del mar --- Convention des Nations Unies sur le droit de la mer --- Convention on the Law of the Sea --- Ittifāqīyat al-Umam al-Muttaḥidah li-Qānūn al-Biḥār --- Ittifāqīyat al-Umam al-Muttaḥidah lil-Qānūn al-Dawlī lil-Biḥār --- Kaiyōhō ni kansuru Kokusai Rengō jōyaku --- Konvensi Hukum Laut --- Konvent︠s︡ii︠a︡ OON po morskomu pravu --- Law of the Sea --- Law of the Sea Convention --- Lian ho guo hai yang fa gong yue --- Lien ho kuo hai yang fa kung yüeh --- Symvasis tōn Hēnōmenōn Ethnōn dia to Dikaion tēs Thalasses --- UN Convention on the Law of the Sea --- UNCLOS --- Lian he guo hai yang fa gong yue --- 联合国海洋法公约 --- Haeyangpŏp e kwanhan Kukche Yŏnhap hyŏbyak --- Konvensi Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa Tentang Hukum Laut --- Contiguous zones (Law of the sea) --- Advice and Rights. --- International law. --- Contiguous zones (Maritime law) --- Economic zones (Law of the sea) --- Territorial waters
Listing 1 - 6 of 6 |
Sort by
|