For the last decade, the United States has been engaged in Freedom of Navigation exercises with ships and aircraft in sea areas of disputed jurisdiction. At times these exercises have evoked armed responses from the nations concerned. What has been the purpose of these precipitous activities on the part of the u.S.? What is the legal basis for this activity, and has it served the interests of the international community or the United States? This paper will examine the elements of international law pertaining to disputes rising from territorial sea claims and their impact on passage and overflight. It will review some of the historic disputes that persist today, namely the Gulf of Sidra and the Black Sea, and examine the actions the i...
This thesis analyses the American policy of sustaining freedom of navigation on the seas through its...
The purpose of this Article is to examine interests involved in the straits question, with emphasis ...
Since both SSBN operations and distant-water activities depend upon the right to navigate outside in...
For the last decade, the United States has been engaged in Freedom of Navigation exercises with sh...
The history of U.S. maritime policy evinces the inexorable relationship between law and politics. Th...
This Article compares the existing law of the sea and the United National Draft Convention on the La...
The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea balances the interests of states in ways that are more refin...
There has been a recent increase in clashes between warships asserting rights to navigate and states...
Through the Freedom of Navigation Program, established in 1979, the United States exercises diplomat...
The phrase ‘creeping jurisdiction’ has been applied by a number of publicists to the gradual extensi...
Hugo Grotius, in his work Mare Liberum, asserted that the world\u27s oceans were free and incapable ...
The right to hot pursuit in the international law of the sea, as encompassed in Article 111 of the U...
Following World War II, the United States began implementing an informal program to protect and prom...
The need for a uniform understanding of international norms regarding freedom of navigation is incre...
In 1946, when the incident that gave rise to the litigation in the Corfu Channel case occurred, almo...
This thesis analyses the American policy of sustaining freedom of navigation on the seas through its...
The purpose of this Article is to examine interests involved in the straits question, with emphasis ...
Since both SSBN operations and distant-water activities depend upon the right to navigate outside in...
For the last decade, the United States has been engaged in Freedom of Navigation exercises with sh...
The history of U.S. maritime policy evinces the inexorable relationship between law and politics. Th...
This Article compares the existing law of the sea and the United National Draft Convention on the La...
The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea balances the interests of states in ways that are more refin...
There has been a recent increase in clashes between warships asserting rights to navigate and states...
Through the Freedom of Navigation Program, established in 1979, the United States exercises diplomat...
The phrase ‘creeping jurisdiction’ has been applied by a number of publicists to the gradual extensi...
Hugo Grotius, in his work Mare Liberum, asserted that the world\u27s oceans were free and incapable ...
The right to hot pursuit in the international law of the sea, as encompassed in Article 111 of the U...
Following World War II, the United States began implementing an informal program to protect and prom...
The need for a uniform understanding of international norms regarding freedom of navigation is incre...
In 1946, when the incident that gave rise to the litigation in the Corfu Channel case occurred, almo...
This thesis analyses the American policy of sustaining freedom of navigation on the seas through its...
The purpose of this Article is to examine interests involved in the straits question, with emphasis ...
Since both SSBN operations and distant-water activities depend upon the right to navigate outside in...