Excessive Maritime Claims

Third Edition

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Now in a third, revised edition, Excessive Maritime Claims by J. Ashley Roach and Robert W. Smith is designed for law of the sea and maritime law specialists. The book draws on published governmental material in the public domain, specifically the U.S., and addresses recent progress in maritime security, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction by sea, piracy, and protection of underwater cultural heritage.

As a result of significant developments in the law of the sea, primarily with reference to the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention, Excessive Maritime Claims provides up to date coverage of current affairs as well as introduce new topics such as: submarine cables, polar areas, environmental protection, sovereign immunity and sunken ships, and maritime law enforcement.

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Preliminary Material
页码: i–lxxi
Chapter Three Historic Waters
页码: 33–56
Chapter Four Baselines
页码: 57–133
Chapter Five Territorial Sea
页码: 135–148
Chapter Six Contiguous Zone
页码: 149–160
Chapter Seven Exclusive Economic Zone
页码: 161–180
Chapter Eight Continental Shelf
页码: 181–201
Chapter Nine Archipelagos
页码: 203–218
Chapter Ten I n The Territorial Sea
页码: 219–266
Chapter Twelve Overflight Restrictions
页码: 345–361
Chapter Fifteen Marine Data Collection
页码: 413–450
Chapter Sixteen Submarine Cables and Pipelines
页码: 451–463
Chapter Seventeen Polar Areas
页码: 465–506
Chapter Twenty Maritime Law Enforcement
页码: 559–630
Appendices
页码: 645–902
Index
页码: 903–925
Captain J. Ashley Roach, JAGC, U.S. Navy (retired), LL.M., George Washington University 1971, J.D. University of Pennsylvania 1963, Office of the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State, 1988-2009, responsible for and has taught, advised and published extensively on law of the sea issues.

Robert W. Smith, Ph.D., Univ. North Carolina (Chapel Hill); U.S. State Dep’t (1975-2006) where he was the government’s geographic expert on maritime boundary and jurisdictional issues. Since mid-2006 serves as an independent Geographic Consultant advising foreign governments, oil and gas companies and international law firms on all aspects of ocean policies and planning and including risk assessments.
PART ONE – INTRODUCTION

1. MAINTAINING FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
2. IDENTIFICATION OF EXCESSIVE MARITIME CLAIMS

PART TWO – LEGAL DIVISIONS OF THE OCEANS AND AIRSPACE

3. HISTORIC WATERS
4. BASELINES
5. TERRITORIAL SEA
6. CONTIGUOUS ZONE
7. EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE
8. CONTINENTAL SHELF
9. ARCHIPELAGOS

PART THREE – NAVIGATION AND OVERFLIGHT RIGHTS AND DUTIES

10. IN THE TERRITORIAL SEA
11. STRAITS USED FOR INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION
12. OVERFLIGHT RESTRICTIONS
13. NAVIGATION AND OVERFLIGHT IN ARCHIPELAGOS
14. NAVIGATION IN EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONES
15. MARINE DATA COLLECTION
16. SUBMARINE CABLES AND PIPELINES

PART FOUR – RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

17. POLAR AREAS
18. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND RESOURCE CONSERVATION
19. SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY AND SUNKEN SHIPS
20. MARITIME LAW ENFORCEMENT

PART FIVE – THE FUTURE AND CONCLUSIONS

21. THE FUTURE OF U.S. OCEAN POLICY

APPENDICES

Index
Law of the sea and maritime law specialists; Government, especially Navy and Coast Guard, officers, lawyers, civilians; international relations scholars; maritime policy, port security, and shipping industry officials.
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