The legal regime governing the recovery of deep seabed minerals may be the most difficult issue now confronting the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea. Congressman Murphy discusses unilateral legislation, concluding that it would be fully consonant with prevailing international law and that it would act as a spur to the negotiations of the Conference. He analyzes the Deep Seabed Mining bill in the contexts of the international legal system and the Law of the Sea Conference and urges the United States to enact the bill so that exploration and commercial recovery may proceed
The United States and some of its major allies have been negotiating for some time concerning the es...
The author reviews negotiations at The Law of the Sea Conference, offering his views as to the sourc...
For most of the last decade, the longest and largest United Nations Conference in history has negoti...
This presentation and panel discussion are part of the symposium entitled: Mining the Deep Seabed: A...
The eighth session of the United Nations Law of the Sea Conference convened recently in Geneva, Swit...
On November 2, 1971, Senator Metcalf introduced the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Bill, drafted...
This Article discusses the major economic and political conflicts that underlie the seabed dispute o...
Presentation and Panel Discussion from the symposium entitled, Mining the Deep Seabed: A Range of Pe...
This Comment analyzes the composition and decision-making procedures of the proposed International S...
Presently, no international law exists to limit recovering mineral sources of the seabed beyond coas...
In June of 1980, the President of the United States signed into law the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Res...
On November 16, 1994, the U.N. Law of the Sea Convention entered into force but without accession by...
The fifth and most recent session of the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sa (UNCLOS) was...
An excited client calls their corporate attorney, claiming to have solved the technical ...
This thesis argues that international law has failed to address the unique jurisdictional and logist...
The United States and some of its major allies have been negotiating for some time concerning the es...
The author reviews negotiations at The Law of the Sea Conference, offering his views as to the sourc...
For most of the last decade, the longest and largest United Nations Conference in history has negoti...
This presentation and panel discussion are part of the symposium entitled: Mining the Deep Seabed: A...
The eighth session of the United Nations Law of the Sea Conference convened recently in Geneva, Swit...
On November 2, 1971, Senator Metcalf introduced the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Bill, drafted...
This Article discusses the major economic and political conflicts that underlie the seabed dispute o...
Presentation and Panel Discussion from the symposium entitled, Mining the Deep Seabed: A Range of Pe...
This Comment analyzes the composition and decision-making procedures of the proposed International S...
Presently, no international law exists to limit recovering mineral sources of the seabed beyond coas...
In June of 1980, the President of the United States signed into law the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Res...
On November 16, 1994, the U.N. Law of the Sea Convention entered into force but without accession by...
The fifth and most recent session of the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sa (UNCLOS) was...
An excited client calls their corporate attorney, claiming to have solved the technical ...
This thesis argues that international law has failed to address the unique jurisdictional and logist...
The United States and some of its major allies have been negotiating for some time concerning the es...
The author reviews negotiations at The Law of the Sea Conference, offering his views as to the sourc...
For most of the last decade, the longest and largest United Nations Conference in history has negoti...