Cries of the sea : world inequality, sustainable development and the common heritage of humanity

Bibliographic Information

Cries of the sea : world inequality, sustainable development and the common heritage of humanity

Peter Bautista Payoyo

(Publications on ocean development / general editor, Shigeru Oda, v. 33)

Martinus Nijhoff, c1997

Available at  / 14 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Bibliography: p. [481]-533

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A treasure lies at the bottom of the oceans. This treasure takes the form of a legal and ethical principle which may illuminate the potential for an enriching international community in a world of growing disparities. It is the principle of the Common Heritage of Humanity. The 1982 United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea delineated an Area and then proclaimed the Area and its resources `the common heritage of mankind'. The author suggests that the terms `common', `heritage', and `humanity' invite a larger perspective on the law underlying the Convention. Cries of the Sea provides a unique view of `the deep blue sea' through the lens of the politics of international ocean law and policy and in particular through the exposition of the Common Heritage of Humanity as a fundamental principle of international law. The book explains why - and how - the Common Heritage principle constitutes an indispensable ingredient in any global programme for sustainable development. Legal philosophers and practitioners alike, in the ocean arena and beyond, will find that this work offers an intriguing intellectual and moral challenge. This book received the first Arvid Pardo Prize for outstanding scholarship on the Law of the Sea.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations. Introduction. Part 1: International Law in an Unequal World. I. Inequality in the International Community. II. World Inequality and the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Part 2: The Common Heritage of Humanity and World Inequality. III. The Common Heritage of Humanity: A Legal Pre-History. IV. Beyond Mare liberum and Mare clausum: The Common Heritage of Humanity as a Fundamental Principle of International Law. V. The Institutional Element of the Common Heritage Principle: Towards and Interactional Organization for Sustainable Development? VI. General Conclusions. References. Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top