During the past two centuries, various states which had previously limited their claims of full sovereignty to narrow marginal seas have also asserted special types of jurisdiction over high seas zones outside what they claimed (or what others accepted) as territorial waters. This comment deals with such claims to contiguous zones of the high seas over which the littoral state asserts authority: which may affect the interests of other states
The special problem of identifying the juridical nature of coastal indentations is but one aspect of...
The desire for territory has been a frequent cause of conflict. Latterly, a territorial integrity no...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...
During the past two centuries, various states which had previously limited their claims of full sove...
It has long been recognized that the boundaries of coastal states encompass certain adjoining mariti...
The consolidation of the law relating to the Continental Shelf following the 1945 United States Proc...
Students of marine affairs can easily trace the evolving process of offshore claims: the expansion o...
This article is set out in three parts. The first section briefly describes the geographic scope of ...
This Comment examines the unilateral development of fishery or economic zone in the contiguous water...
This article casts aside traditional obsessions and examines the development and present state of co...
In 1982 the USA and other major industrial states refused to sign the Convention on the Law of the S...
The 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea provides coastal States with rights to a mi...
Recent decades have witnessed a tremendous extension of coastal state claims to maritime jurisdictio...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...
The special problem of identifying the juridical nature of coastal indentations is but one aspect of...
The desire for territory has been a frequent cause of conflict. Latterly, a territorial integrity no...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...
During the past two centuries, various states which had previously limited their claims of full sove...
It has long been recognized that the boundaries of coastal states encompass certain adjoining mariti...
The consolidation of the law relating to the Continental Shelf following the 1945 United States Proc...
Students of marine affairs can easily trace the evolving process of offshore claims: the expansion o...
This article is set out in three parts. The first section briefly describes the geographic scope of ...
This Comment examines the unilateral development of fishery or economic zone in the contiguous water...
This article casts aside traditional obsessions and examines the development and present state of co...
In 1982 the USA and other major industrial states refused to sign the Convention on the Law of the S...
The 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea provides coastal States with rights to a mi...
Recent decades have witnessed a tremendous extension of coastal state claims to maritime jurisdictio...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...
The special problem of identifying the juridical nature of coastal indentations is but one aspect of...
The desire for territory has been a frequent cause of conflict. Latterly, a territorial integrity no...
Recently, after several decades of negotiations, the United States, acting through the President, op...