Common heritage or common burden? : the United States position on the development of a regime for deap [sic] sea-bed mining in the Law of the Sea Convention
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Common heritage or common burden? : the United States position on the development of a regime for deap [sic] sea-bed mining in the Law of the Sea Convention
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1989
- Other Title
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Common heritage or common burden? : the United States position on the development of a regime for deep sea-bed mining in the Law of the Sea Convention
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Note
Bibliography: p. [329]-358
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Common Heritage or Common Burden? contains a comprehensive and authoritative assessment of the US role in the negotiations on the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and particularly in the negotiations on one of the remaining commons, the ocean floor beyond national jurisdiction. The author first examines the US view of the lawfulness of deep seabed mining under international law. He reviews the bureaucratic struggles, within the US Administration and the
Congress, concerning the options to be pursued at the Conference; analyses the US position in the seabed negotiations from 1974 to 1980; and casts a fresh look both on the Reagan Administration's `policy review' of 1981-1982 which threatened the Conference's outcome, and current US oceans policy which
remains an impediment to the Convention's early entry into force.
The study suggests that despite significant compromises negotiated between the US and developing countries at the Conference up to 1980, the emerging seabed regime was not as widely endorsed by US officials as is generally assumed. Drawing on material collected from interviews with many key negotiators, the study contributes to a better understanding of domestic and international decision-making procedures and the dynamics of international negotiations.
Table of Contents
- An outline of the problem
- the build-up to UNCLOS, Pardo's common heritage proposal, and the United States view on the lawfulness of deep sea-bed mining
- dilemmas of United States domestic sea-bed politics
- towards domestic sea-bed legislation
- the United States position in Committee One at UNCLOS - the negotiation of the system of exploitation, the production policy debate
- the Reagan administration's policy review
- the Reagan administrtion's law of the sea policy, 1982-1987.
by "Nielsen BookData"