23 January 2012
Making Laws on the High Seas
Kristina Gjerde studies the law of the high seas – the 64 percent of our ocean that isn't protected by any national law at all. Her presentation shows the hidden worlds that Gjerde and other lawyers are working to protect from trawling and trash-dumping, through smart policy-making and a healthy dose of PR.
Related Reading
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UNCLOS and its Limitations as the Foundation for a Regional Maritime Security Regime |
UN Convention on the High Seas
This international treaty, one of four agreed upon at the first UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, was created to codify the rules of international law relating to the high seas. It entered into force in 1962.
UN Convention of the Law of the Sea
This UN Convention provides a regulatory framework for the use of the world’s seas and oceans, inter alia to ensure the conservation and equitable usage of marine resources. It entered into force in 1994.
The International Legal Regime of the High Seas
This paper, prepared by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, provides a unique and valuable analysis of the international legal regime of the high seas, as well as options for cooperation for the establishment of marine protected areas.
World Ocean Public Trust: High Seas Fisheries After Grotius – Towards a New Ocean Ethos?
This paper illustrates how the international law duty to conserve marine life, and protect and preserve the marine environment of the high seas, is in a precarious state. It further evaluates the concept of a World Ocean Public Trust and its feasibility in light of international law of the sea regimes.
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Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported
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