The Law of the Sea: Cases, Documents, and Readings, Pages 501-871Nautilus Press, 1975 - Maritime law |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 55
Page 806
... maritime sources are considered , sea - bed activities make up about 5 per cent of ocean oil pollution with vessels accounting for the other 95 per cent . Of course , sea - bed exploitation will intensify , and the United States has ...
... maritime sources are considered , sea - bed activities make up about 5 per cent of ocean oil pollution with vessels accounting for the other 95 per cent . Of course , sea - bed exploitation will intensify , and the United States has ...
Page 827
... maritime powers are generally opposed to zonal approaches to jurisdiction - whether in regard to fisheries jurisdiction , vessel pollution control , or regulation of scientific research - while most developing nations perceive that ...
... maritime powers are generally opposed to zonal approaches to jurisdiction - whether in regard to fisheries jurisdiction , vessel pollution control , or regulation of scientific research - while most developing nations perceive that ...
Page 828
... maritime transport , the effect would obviously be felt not only by the United States and other maritime powers , but by the majority of the world's coastal nations . Thus the form which pollution control agreements take concerning ...
... maritime transport , the effect would obviously be felt not only by the United States and other maritime powers , but by the majority of the world's coastal nations . Thus the form which pollution control agreements take concerning ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accordance action activities adopted agreement America applicable appropriate Article Assembly authority claim coast coastal Commission Committee concerning conduct Conference conservation considered Continental Shelf Convention countries deep Department deposits determine draft economic effect established exclusive exploitation exploration extended fishery fishing force foreign freedom Government high seas industry Int'l interests international law islands issues jurisdiction Lands limits living major marine marine environment Maritime matter means measures miles mineral mining natural resources navigation necessary negotiations NOTE objective Ocean ocean floor Offshore operations Organization outer Parties Peaceful pollution port position possible present principles problems production proposed protection question reasonable REFERENCES regard regime regulations Report request respect result rules scientific research sea-bed seabed Secretary Security session ship species Strait subsoil territorial sea tion Treaty United Nations vessels waters zone