Tuesday, 19 November 2019
Worse Things Happen at Sea
Law in Action
Law of the Sea:
- Law of the sea covers many areas: inter alia, jurisdiction, criminal law (crime committed on the
sea) governing the conduct and welfare of those on it (and above and below it), resource
management, environmental protection
- Inter alia - amongst other things
The Actual Law of the Sea - Overview:
- Mixture of treaties & customary international law
- Geneva Conventions:
- Convention on the High Seas (1958)
- Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone (1958)
- Convention in the Continental Shelf (1958)
- Convention on Fishing and Conservative of the Living Resources of the High Seas
(1958)
- United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982)
Evolution of the Law of the Sea:
- Global seas essential to human trade and prosperity since Antiquity
- Ownership?:
- Grotius, Mare Liberum (1609) [‘The Freedom of the Seas’]
- Growth of maritime trading empires & crystallisation of ‘freedom of the high seas’.
- Fundamental problem: balancing freedom of the high seas with territorial State sovereignty
- The ‘three mile limit’
Evolution of the Law of the Sea - Codi cation
- Late 19th century onwards
- League of Nations Codi cation Conference 1930
- 1945 - President Truman’s Continental Shelf Proclamation
- UNCLOS I (1956 - 58) - Geneva Conventions:
- Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone (TSC)
1
fi fi
Worse Things Happen at Sea
Law in Action
Law of the Sea:
- Law of the sea covers many areas: inter alia, jurisdiction, criminal law (crime committed on the
sea) governing the conduct and welfare of those on it (and above and below it), resource
management, environmental protection
- Inter alia - amongst other things
The Actual Law of the Sea - Overview:
- Mixture of treaties & customary international law
- Geneva Conventions:
- Convention on the High Seas (1958)
- Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone (1958)
- Convention in the Continental Shelf (1958)
- Convention on Fishing and Conservative of the Living Resources of the High Seas
(1958)
- United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982)
Evolution of the Law of the Sea:
- Global seas essential to human trade and prosperity since Antiquity
- Ownership?:
- Grotius, Mare Liberum (1609) [‘The Freedom of the Seas’]
- Growth of maritime trading empires & crystallisation of ‘freedom of the high seas’.
- Fundamental problem: balancing freedom of the high seas with territorial State sovereignty
- The ‘three mile limit’
Evolution of the Law of the Sea - Codi cation
- Late 19th century onwards
- League of Nations Codi cation Conference 1930
- 1945 - President Truman’s Continental Shelf Proclamation
- UNCLOS I (1956 - 58) - Geneva Conventions:
- Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone (TSC)
1
fi fi