書誌事項

The yearbook of polar law

edited by Gudmundur Alfredsson, Timo Koivurova

Martinus Nijhoff, 2009-

  • v. 1 (2009)
  • v. 2 (2010)
  • v. 3 (2011)
  • v. 4 (2012)
  • v. 5 (2013) : hardback
  • v. 6 (2014) : hardback
  • v. 7 (2015) : hardback
  • v. 8 (2016) : hardback
  • v. 9 (2017) : hardback
  • v. 10 (2018) : hardback
  • v. 11 (2019) : hardback

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注記

Special editor for v. 1: David Leary; v. 2: Natalia Loukacheva; v. 3: Kamrul Hossain; v. 4: Waliul Hasanat; v. 5: Adam Stepien; v. 6: Hjalti Ómar Ágústsson; v.7: Julia Jabour; v. 8: Betsy Baker, Mara Kimmel; v. 9: Sune Tamm, Lindsay Arthur; v. 10: Dorothée Cambou, Joëlle Klein; v. 11: Nigel Bankes, Erik J. Molenaar, Tore Henriksen

Vol. 10 based on the 10 th Polar Law Symposium, held in Rovaniemi in Nov, 2017

Vol. 11 based on the 11 th Polar Law Symposium, held in Tromsø in Oct., 2018

Includes bibliographical references

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

v. 1 (2009) ISBN 9789004178410

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law, based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland, covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local and national governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. This first volume contains the presentations made at the first Symposium on Polar Law organised at the University of Akureyri in Iceland in September 2008.

目次

  • Acknowledgements
  • Introductory Words Gudmundur Alfredsson and Timo Koivurova
  • Editors Note David Leary
  • Looking beyond the International Polar Year: An Opening Address The President of Iceland Olafur Ragnar Grimsson at the University of Akureyri
  • Looking beyond the International Polar Year: What are the Emerging and Re-emerging Issues in International Law and Policy in the Polar Regions? David Leary
  • So Much Law so Little Protection! A Case Study of the Protection of the Narwhal Malgosia Fitzmaurice
  • From the New Geopolitics of Resources to Nanotechnology: Emerging Challenges of Globalism in Antarctica Alan D. Hemmings
  • Protecting Polar Wilderness: Just a Western Philosophical Idea or a Useful Concept for Regulating Human Activities in the Polar Regions? Kees I. Bastmeijer
  • Terrestrial Area Management in Polar Regions: Applying the Eco-System-Based Approach to the Coalface of Climate Change Michael I. Jeff ery
  • Polar Bears, a Melting Arctic, and the United States Endangered Species Act: The Role of Domestic Wildlife Law in Polar Biodiversity Protection Kassie R. Siegel and Brendan R. Cummings
  • Bioprospecting in Antarctica and the Arctic. Common Challenges? David Leary
  • Land Claim Agreements in Arctic Canada in Light of International Human Rights Norms Nigel Bankes
  • Human Rights and the Arctic Gudmundur Alfredsson
  • Indigenous Self-Government in the Arctic, and their Right to Land and Natural Resources Asbjorn Eide
  • Sustainable Human Rights and Governance: The Quest of an Arctic Entity in Transition Natalia Loukacheva and Matthew D. Garfi eld
  • Implementing Sustainable Development in the Arctic:What Principles Should Guide Environmental Governance in Traditional Areas of Indigenous Peoples Facing the Impacts of Climate Change? Donna Craig
  • Charting a Sustainable Course through Changing Arctic Waters Robin Warner
  • Protecting the Arctic Environment: The Interplay of Global and Regional Regimes Olav Schram Stokke
  • Legal Issues Relating to Navigation through Arctic Waters Tullio Scovazzi
  • Protecting Antarctica from Non-Native Species: The Imperatives and the Impediments Sandra Potter
  • A Bird's-Eye View of Arctic Governance: Refl ecting on the Role of International Law in Arctic Cooperation from a Bird Conservation Perspective Arie Trouwborst
  • Arctic Fisheries Conservation and Management: Initial Steps of Reform of the International Legal Framework Erik Molenaar
  • Warm Waters and Cold Shoulders: Jostling for Jurisdiction in Polar Oceans Rosemary Rayfuse
  • Do the Continental Shelf Developments Challenge the Polar Regimes? Timo Koivurova
  • Reactions and Overreactions to the Russian Flag on the Seabed at the North Pole Andrew Serdy
  • Arctic Ocean State-Changes: Self Interests and Common Interests Paul Arthur Berkman
  • Antarctic Treaty Summit: Science-Policy Interactions in International Governance Paul Arthur Berkman.
巻冊次

v. 2 (2010) ISBN 9789004187870

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law, based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland, covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local and national governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. As in the previous volume, much of the material in this volume is based on the presentations made at the Akureyri Symposia on Polar Law; the Second Symposium was held in September 2009. Yet, there are also new elements in this Yearbook. The Yearbook now carries relevant book reviews, and a new section will attempt to keep up with recent developments rapidly unfolding in the Polar Regions.

目次

  • Introduction Gudmundur Alfredsson and Timo Koivurova
  • The North: A New Academic Frontier An Opening Address by the President of Iceland
  • Olafur Ragnar Grimsson at the Second Akureyri Polar Law Symposium, University of Akureyri 10 September 2009
  • The Arctic - Navigational Issues under International Law of the Sea R. Douglas Brubaker
  • Governing Arctic Shipping: Finding a Role for the Arctic Council Timo Koivurova
  • International Governance in the Arctic: The Law of the Sea Convention with Special Focus on Offshore Oil and Gas Kamrul Hossain
  • Nationalizing the Arctic Maritime Commons: UNCLOS Article 76 and the Polar Sea Ron Macnab
  • The Increasing Complexity of Global and Regional Governance: New Context for Polar Law Louis W. Pauly
  • Potential Roles of NATO and the EU in High Northern Security Alyson JK Bailes
  • Resource Frontier or Extractive Periphery?: The Political Ecology of Oil and Gas in the North Mark Nuttall
  • The Southern and Arctic Oceans: Polar Opposites in Many Respects Ron Macnab
  • Indigenous Whaling, Protection of the Environment, Intergenerational Rights and Environmental Ethics Malgosia Fitzmaurice
  • Cooperation in the Barents Euro-Arctic Region in the Light of International Law Md. Waliul Hasanat
  • Recent Developments in Polar Law
  • Honorary Doctor Gudmundur Alfredsson
  • Arctic Dimensions in Law - Current Research and Education at the Faculty of Law, the University of Tromso Christina Allard, Tore Henriksen, and Oyvind Ravna
  • Polar Law Textbook Natalia Loukacheva
  • Northern Research Forum -Thematic Group on Legal Issues in the Arctic Natalia Loukacheva
  • Book Reviews: Robin Warner, 2009. Protecting the Oceans beyond National Jurisdiction: Strengthening the International Law Framework. By Neil Craik. Christina Voigt, 2009, Sustainable Development as a Principle of International Law: Resolving Conflicts between Climate Measures and WTO Law. By Meinhard Doelle. Eds., Aldo Chircop, Ted L. McDorman, and Susan J. Rolston. 2009. The Future of Ocean Regime-Building: Essays in Tribute to Douglas M. Johnston. By Erik Franckx. Eds. Jessica M. Shadian and Monica Tennberg, 2009. Legacies and Change in Polar Sciences: Historical, Legal and Political Reflections on the International Polar Year. By David Leary. Index
巻冊次

v. 3 (2011) ISBN 9789004210776

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law, based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland, covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local and national governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. This is the third volume of The Yearbook of Polar Law. Much of its contents is derived from the presentations made at the Third Akureyri Symposium on Polar Law that was held between 9 and 11 September 2010. The themes of the Third Symposium were human rights and good governance in the Polar Regions.

目次

  • General Part Introduction Gudmundur Alfredsson and Timo Koivurova
  • Editors' Note: The Arctic States can do Better on Human Rights Gudmundur Alfredsson, Timo Koivurova and Kamrul Hossain
  • Address by Minister of Education, Iceland: Human Rights Education in Countries of the North - Cooperation Across Borders - The Arctic in the Middle of the Circle HE Katrin Jakobsdottir
  • Address by the Rector of the University of Akureyri Stefan B. Sigurdsson
  • Address by the Dean, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Akureyri Sigurdur Kristinsson
  • Address by Professor Nigel Bankes on Acceptance of an Honorary Doctoral Degree awarded by the University of Akureyri Nigel Bankes
  • Articles Case Law of the UN Human Rights Committee relevant to Members of Minorities and Peoples in the Arctic Region Jakob Th. Moeller
  • The Protection of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples to Territory through the Property Rights Provisions of International Regional Human Rights Instruments Nigel Bankes
  • Causation in Cases of Environmental Degradation: The Missing Link in Adjudicating Human Rights Bostjan M. Zupancic
  • The Realization of the Right to Environment and the Right to Development in respect to the Arctic Indigenous Peoples Kamrul Hossain
  • Good Governance and Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Lee Swepston
  • The Status and Role of Indigenous Peoples in Arctic International Governance Timo Koivurova
  • Towards an Equal Partnership between Indigenous Peoples and States: Learning from Arctic Experiences? Leena Heinamaki
  • Indigenous Peoples' Participation in the context of Area Protection and Management: International Approaches versus Regional Approaches in the Arctic Antje Neumann
  • The Influence of Sami and Inuit on the Danish and Norwegian Development Cooperation with the Indigenous Peoples in the Global South: Actors and Norms Adam Stepien
  • Creation of Autonomous Government in Nunavik Jean-Francois Arteau
  • The Historical Basis of Saami Land Rights in Finland and the Application of ILO Convention No. 169 Tanja Joona and Juha Joona
  • Practical Implementation of Indigenous Peoples' Land Rights: A Case Study of the Russian Federation (Comparison with Certain Developments in Africa in Relation to Indigenous Peoples) Malgosia Fitzmaurice
  • The Process of Identifying Land Rights in parts of Northern Norway: Does the Finnmark Act Prescribe an Adequate Procedure within the National Law? Oyvind Ravna
  • Defending Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Iceland's Financial Crisis Rachael Lorna Johnstone and Adalheidur Amundadottir
  • Fisheries Governance and Social Discourse in Post-Crisis Iceland: Responses to the UN Human Rights Committee's views in Case 1306/2004 Niels Einarsson
  • Human Rights and Security: Wider Applications in a Warmer Arctic? Alyson JK Bailes
  • Holes in the Ice: Why a Comprehensive Treaty Will Not Succeed in the Arctic and How to Implement an Alternative Approach Emily Hildreth
  • Observers in the Arctic Council - Evolution and Prospects Piotr Graczyk
  • Intergenerational Equity and the Antarctic Treaty System: Continued Efforts to Prevent "Mastery" Kees Bastmeijer
  • Drawing Lessons for Arctic Governance from the Antarctic Treaty System Sebastien Duyck
  • Recent Developments in Polar Law The Polar Law Institute Gudmundur Alfredsson
  • Canada's Northern Vision Terry Fenge
  • The Creation of an Arctic Law Thematic Network (University of the Arctic) Timo Koivurova
  • Book Reviews Eds. Michael Luck, Patrick T. Maher and Emma J. Stewart, 2010. Cruise Tourism in Polar Regions Promoting Environmental and Social Sustainability? By Kees Bastmeijer Eds. Felix Dodds, Andrew Higham and Richard Sherman, 2009. Climate Change and Energy Insecurity The Challenge for Peace, Security and Development. By Michael Bradshaw Leena Heinamaki, 2010. The right to be a part of nature: indigenous peoples and the environment. By Laura Westra
巻冊次

v. 4 (2012) ISBN 9789004233966

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law, is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Northern Institute for Environmental and Minority Law (Arctic Centre/University of Lapland) in Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. This is the fourth volume of The Yearbook of Polar Law. Much of its contents is derived from the presentations made at the Fourth Akureyri Symposium on Polar Law that was held in Nuuk in Greenland 9-11 September 2011. The themes of the Fourth Symposium covered the whole gamut of polar governance related topics.

目次

  • General Part Editorial Timo Koivurova, Gudmundur Alfredsson and Waliul Hasanat
  • A Speech by the President of Iceland H.E. Olafur Ragnar Grimsson
  • Perspectives of the Arctic Council Anton Vasiliev
  • Thoughts on a Greenlandic Constitution Mininnguaq Kleist
  • Articles What Could the Arctic Council Learn from the Council of Baltic Sea States in Promoting Arctic Governance? Matti Niemivuo
  • The Arctic Council - from Knowledge Production to Influencing Arctic Policy Making Paula Kankaanpaa
  • The Arctic Council: Promoting Co-operation in the Circumpolar World Terry Fenge
  • A Proposal for an Arctic Nuclear-Weapon Free Zone Thomas S Axworthy
  • Arctic Governance: Human Rights, Good Governance and Democracy Gudmundur Alfredsson
  • Inuit Governance and Contemporary Challenges: New Questions for Arctic Governance Cecile Pelaudeix
  • The Inuit Declaration on Sovereignty in the Arctic: Between the Right to Self-Determination and a New Concept of Sovereignty? Fiammeta Borgia
  • International Protection Mechanism of Indigenous Peoples Anatoly Kovler
  • Tensions Between States and Indigenous People over Natural Resources in light of the 1989 ILO Convention No. 169 Concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries and the 2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (including relevant national legislation and case-law) Malgosia Fitzmaurice
  • Legal Protection of Coastal Sami Culture and Livelihood in Norway Oyvind Ravna
  • Recognition and Enforcement of Indigenous Peoples' Land Rights in Alaska, the Northern Regions of Canada, Greenland, and Siberia and the Russian Far East Katja Goecke
  • Polar Diplomacy in an Age of Climate Change and Energy Dependence - the Role of Greenland in Dealing with China in the Arctic Damien Degeorges
  • Human Rights approach to the Protection of Traditional Knowledge: An Appraisal of the Draft Nordic Saami Convention Kamrul Hossain
  • The Faroe Islands between Parliamentary Sovereignty and Sub-National Constitutionalism and between Statutory Positivism and Pragmatic Reasoning Bardur Larsen and Dr Kari a Rogvi
  • A Critical Analysis of the Margin of Appreciation Doctrine of the ECtHR, with Special Attention to Rights of a Traditional Way of Life and a Healthy Environment: A Call for an Alternative Model of International Supervision Kristin Henrard
  • The Right to Be a Part of Nature: Greening Human Rights via Strengthening Indigenous Peoples Leena Heinamaki
  • Offshore Oil and Gas Regulation in the Arctic: Room for Harmonization? Betsy Baker
  • The Barents Sea 2010 Norway-Russia border: The Triumph of the Negotiation Principle at the Expense of the Median- and Sector Line Pretentions Peter Orebech
  • Problem-Solving Capabilities, Goal-Attainment and Effectiveness of the Barents Environmental Cooperation Nikolas Sellheim
  • Development of an Environmental Chapter in the Polar Code: Introducing a New Player - Black Carbon Laura Boone
  • The Role of International Governance Systems in Protecting the Arctic Environment: Examining Climate Change Policy Md Waliul Hasanat
  • Which Canary in the Coalmine? The Arctic in the International Climate Change Regime Sebastien Duyck
  • European Interests as regards Resource Exploitation in the Arctic: How Sustainable are European Efforts in this regard? Antje Neumann
  • Marine Protected Areas: the Chagos Case and the Need to Marry International Environmental Law with Indigenous Rights Achinthi Vithanage
  • Mining and Pollution: Arctic Environmental Law in Greenland and the Mining Industry Bent Ole Gram Mortensen
  • Material Talk: The Arctic Continental Shelf in the Law of the Sea Convention Discussion of the United States Sami Torssonen
  • The Antarctic Treaty System: What's on the Horizon? Dr Julia Jabour
  • Book Reviews Dwight Newman, 2011. Community and Collective Rights: A Theoretical Framework for Rights Held by Groups. By Christina Allard
  • Cinnamon Pinon Carlarne, 2010. Climate Change Law and Policy: EU and US Approaches. By Kati Kulovesi
  • Eds. Ian Havercroft, Richard Macrory and Richard B Stewart, 2011. Carbon Capture and Storage
  • Emerging Legal and Regulatory Issues. By Nigel Bankes Ed. Clive R. Symmons, 2011. Selected Contemporary Issues in the Law of the Sea. By Ted L. McDorman
  • Ken S. Coates et al., 2008. Arctic Front Defending Canada in the Far North
  • & Shelagh D. Grant, 2010. Polar Imperative A History of Arctic Sovereignty in North America. By Terry Fenge
  • Eds. Manfred Sapper, Volker Weichsel, Christoph Humrich, 2011. Logbuch Arktis: Der Raum, die Interessen und das Recht. By Ian Kattein
巻冊次

v. 5 (2013) : hardback ISBN 9789004261785

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law, is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Northern Institute for Environmental and Minority Law (Arctic Centre/University of Lapland) in Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. This is the fifth volume of The Yearbook of Polar Law. Its contents is derived from the presentations made at the Fifth Symposium on Polar Law that was held in Rovaniemi, Finland, in September 2012.

目次

  • Editorial Note, Gudmundur Alfredsson, Timo Koivurova and Adam Stepien Articles: Cooperation and Geopolitics in the North Changing the Arctic Paradigm from Cold War to Cooperation: How Canada's Indigenous Leaders Shaped the Arctic Council, Thomas S. Axworthy and Ryan Dean Northern Europe and the Arctic Agenda: Roles of Nordic and Other Sub-regional Organizations, Alyson J. K. Bailes and Kristmundur Th. Olafsson Iceland: A Small Arctic State Facing Big Arctic Changes, Margret Cela Arctic Security - Global Dimensions and Challenges, and National Policy Responses, Lassi Heininen Multilevel Governance of Change in the Polar Regions Uranium Mining in Nunavut, Katja Goecke Climate Change Turn in the Regional Development Strategies of an Arctic Region, Case Finnish Lapland, Ilona Mettiainen Breaking the Wall of Monocentric Governance: Polycentricity in the Governance of Persistent Organic Pollutants in the Arctic, Tahnee Lisa Prior The Polar Regions and the Development of International Law: Contemporary Reflections and Twenty-First Century Challenges, Donald R. Rothwell Arctic Maritime Transport The Shape of Things to Come: The Russian Federation and the Northern Sea Route in 2011, Erik Franckx An International Polar Code of Navigation: Consequences and Opportunities for the Arctic, Andrea Scassola The Arctic Search and Rescue Agreement: Text, Framing and Logics, Corine Wood-Donnelly Impact Assessments in the Arctic Environmental Assessment in Russian Law: Can It Promote Sustainable Development in the Russian Arctic?, Inna A. Ignatieva Evaluating Espoo: To What Extent does the Espoo Convention Protect the Arctic Marine Environment?, Rachael Lorna Johnstone Social Impact Assessment, Including Impact Assessments in Relation to Mineral Extraction in Greenland, Thomas Trier Hansen and Bent Ole Gram Mortensen Sealing and Whaling The Impact of the Ban on Seal Products on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: A European Issue, Dorothee Cambou The Neglected Tradition? - The Genesis of the EU Seal Products Trade Ban and Commercial Sealing, Nikolas Sellheim The International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling and International Whaling Commission - Conservation or Preservation - Can the Gordian Knot Be Cut (or Untangled)?, Malgosia Fitzmaurice Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples Securing the Rights: A Human Security Perspective in the Context of Arctic Indigenous Peoples, Kamrul Hossain Language Rights for Indigenous Peoples: The Case of the Russian Federation, Elena Knyazeva Revitalisation of Ainu Culture and Protection of their Right to Culture: Learning from Norwegian Sami Experiences, Hiroshi Maruyama Human Rights of Non-indigenous Arctic Inhabitants Impact of Climate Change on Elderly People in the Arctic, with Special Focus on the European High North: A Human Rights Perspective, Shahnaj Begum Implementation of the EU Immigration Policy in the Barents Euro-Arctic Region: Towards a Framework for Policy Analysis, Nafisa Yeasmin Perspectives (non-peer-reviewed papers) Problems of the Legal Bases of Environmental Safety of the Arctic, Alexandra Ivanova 'Himadri'and the Global Politics of Melting Ice: India's Arctic Presence and the March Towards Global Governance, Anuradha Nayak The Status of Unrecognized Indigenous Communities and Rural Old-Residents of the Russian Arctic, Maxim Zadorin Recent Developments in Polar Law Polar Law Textbook II - 2013, Natalia Loukacheva Book Reviews: Book Review: Human Rights and the Environment: Philosophical, Theoretical and Legal Perspectives By Linda Hajjar Leib, Queen Mary Studies in International Law Vol. 3, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Leiden, Boston 2011, pp. 182. ISBN9789040188658, by Leena Heinamaki Book Review: Steve Vanderheiden (Ed.) The Politics of Energy: Challenges for a Sustainable Future. Routledge, London and New York: 2012, VIII + 165 pp., hardback, ISBN13: 978-0-415-52307-3
  • by Michael Laiho Book Review: Il regime giuridico dell'Artico: una nuova frontiera per il diritto internazionale (Eng. The Legal Regime of the Arctic: A New Frontier for International Law) by Fiammetta Borgia, Studi e documenti di diritto internazionale e comunitario 59, Editoriale Scientifica (2012), 590 pp. ISBN 978-88-6342-370-9
  • by Andrea Scassola Book Review: Statuksettomat saamelaiset Paikantumisia saamelaisuuden rajoilla (Non-Status Sami Locations within Sami Borderlands) Doctoral Thesis by Erika Sarivaara. Sami Allaskuvla, DIEDUT 2/2012, 300pp. ISBN 978-82-7367-031-1
  • by Tanja Joona Book Review: Mario Prost, The Concept of Unity in Public International Law, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2012, pp. 226. Hardback: 9781849460439
  • by Ulf Linderfalk
巻冊次

v. 6 (2014) : hardback ISBN 9789004271548

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law, is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Northern Institute for Environmental and Minority Law (Arctic Centre/University of Lapland) in Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. While some of the articles are submitted directly to the Yearbook, others are based on presentations made at the Sixth Symposium on Polar Law that was held in Akureyri, Iceland, in October 2013.

目次

  • Statement by the President of Iceland, Olafur Ragnar Grimsson
  • Remarks to the Sixth Symposium on Polar Law - University of Akureyri, 11 October 2013. New Developments: The Arctic Council Secretariat, Magnus Johannesson, Director, Arctic Council Secretariat
  • Editorial Note, Gudmundur Alfredsson, Timo Koivurova and Hjalti Omar Agustsson
  • Articles Invoking Responsibility For Environmental Injury In The Arctic Ocean, Rachael L. Johnstone
  • Exploiting Hydropower In Greenland: Climate, Security Of Supply, Environmental Risks And Energy-Intensive Industries, Bent Ole G. Mortensen
  • Balancing De Jure And De Facto Arctic Environmental Law Applied To The Oil And Gas Industry: Linking Indigenous Rights, Social Impact Assessment, And Business, In Greenland, Sandra Cassotta and Mauro Mazza
  • The interplay of Russian law, indigenous people and the oil and gas industry - a need for non-governmental regulation? Minna Pappila
  • The Inughuit of Northwest Greenland: An Unacknowledged Indigenous People, Terto Ngiviu Rising Waters, Rising Threats: The Human Trafficking of Indigenous Women in the Circumpolar Region of the United States and Canada, Victoria Sweet
  • The Protection of the Culturally and Spiritually Important Landscapes of Arctic Indigenous Peoples under the Convention on Biological Diversity and First Experiences from the Application of the Akwe:Kon Guidelines in Finland, Leena Heinamaki, Thora Martina Herrmann and Antje Neumann
  • The World Heritage Convention in the Arctic and Indigenous People: Time to Reform? Simon Marsden
  • Ethnocultural Diversity and Human Rights: Legal Categories, Claims, and the Hybridity of Group Protection, Gaetano Pentassuglia
  • Sovereigns, not Stakeholders: An Alaskan Study in Fate Control, Mara Kimmel
  • Developments in the Arctic Council, Natalia Loukacheva
  • The Role of the Arctic Council from an International Law Perspective: Past, Present and Future, Yoshinobu Takei
  • Observer States' Commitments to the Arctic Council: the Arctic Policy Documents of the United Kingdom and Germany as Case Study, Malgorzata Smieszek and Paula Kankaanpaa
  • What is "Arctic governance"? A critical assessment of the diverse meanings of 'Arctic governance', Cecile Pelaudeix
  • The EU, the Arctic, and Arctic Indigenous Peoples, Federica Scarpa
  • 'Direct and individual concern' for Newfoundland's sealing industry? - When a legal concept and empirical data collide, Nikolas Sellheim
  • Regulating the Whale Wars: Freedom of Protest, Navigational Safety and the Law of the Sea in the Polar Regions, Richard J. Caddell
  • China's Role in the Changing Governance of Arctic Shipping, Nengye Liu
  • Antarctica - A Wilderness Continent for Science: The 'Public's Dream' as a Mission Impossible? Kees Bastmeijer and Tina Tin
  • The Small Nations Of The Wider Arctic Space: Security Challenges, Policy Options, Alyson Bailes
  • Book Reviews Book Review: Human Dependence on Nature. How to help solve the environmental crisis, Haydn Washington (with a foreword by Professor Paul R. Ehrlich). London and New York: Routledge, 2013, 162 p., softcover, ISBN: 978-0-415-63258-4, by Gerald Zojer. Book Review: Economics, Sustainability and Democracy: Economics in the Era of Climate Change. Christopher Nobbs. London: Routledge. 2013, 273 pp. ISBN 978-0-415-52440-7, by Hanna Lempinen. Book Review: Introduction to International Environmental Law, Timo Koivurova. London: Routledge, 2014. 234pp. ISBN: 978-0-415-81574-1, by Indi Hodgson-Johnston. Book Review: Circumpolar Health Atlas, T. Kue Young, Rajiv Rawat, Winfried Dallmann, Susan Chatwood, and Peter Bjerregaard (eds.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2012, pp.190 ISBN 978-1-4426-4456-4. Hardbound. Cdn$ 75.00, Shahnaj Begum.
巻冊次

v. 7 (2015) : hardback ISBN 9789004288904

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Northern Institute for Environmental and Minority Law (Arctic Centre/University of Lapland) in Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. Many of the papers in this volume are based on presentations at the 7th Polar Law Symposium held in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia from 28 - 30 October 2014.

目次

  • Editorial
  • Memoriam: In Memory of Kari A Rogvi
  • Address to Open the 7th Polar Law Symposium By the Honourable Justice Alan Blow OAM, Lieutenant Governor of Tasmania
  • Articles: Japan and 100 Years of Antarctic Legal Order: Any Lessons for the Arctic? Akiho Shibata
  • Responsive Antarctic Law-Making in the Asian Century Ben Saul and Tim Stephens
  • China as the Guardian of the International Seabed Area in the Central Arctic Ocean Bjarni Mar Magnusson
  • Arctic Mining: The Case of Greenland Bent Ole Gram Mortensen
  • China's interests in the Arctic and the EU's Arctic policy: towards a proactive EU foreign policy? Cecile Pelaudeix
  • Possible Challenges on the Path towards Iranian Active Scientific Research Presence in the Antarctic: An International Legal Approach Zia E Madani
  • The Consequences of the ICJ Decision in the Whaling Case for Antarctica and the Antarctic Treaty System Michael Johnson
  • Seal Hunting in the Arctic States. An Analysis of Legislative Frameworks, Incentives and Histories. Nikolas Sellheim
  • The Arctic Economic Council - the Origins Natalia Loukacheva
  • Internal Contradictions and External Anxieties: One 'Coherent' Arctic Policy for the European Union? Adam Stepien
  • Human and Fundamental Rights of the Sami Matti Niemivuo
  • Energy, Environment and Indigenous Rights: Arctic Experiences Compared Mauro Mazza
  • Legal Measures for Efficient Environmental Regulations of Oil and Gas Industry in Western Siberia Elena Gladun and Gennady Chebotarev
  • Climate Change, Arctic Aesthetics, and Indigenous Agency in the Age of the Anthropocene Victoria Hermann
  • Can We Conclude an Arctic Treaty? - Historical Windows of Opportunity Timo Koivurova
  • The IMO mandatory international code of safety for ships: charting a sustainable course for shipping in the polar regions? David Leary*
  • International governance of the Antarctic - participation, transparency and legitimacy Jill Barrett
  • CCAMLR Conservation Measures: How the Chairman's Statement Works Denzil GM Miller
  • Nationalism in Today's Antarctic Alan D. Hemmings, Sanjay Chaturvedi, Elizabeth Leane, Daniela Liggett and Juan Francisco Salazar
  • The Laws of Territorial Acquisition as Applied to Claims to Antarctic Territory: A Review of Legal Scholarship Indi Hodgson-Johnston
  • Conceptions and (mis)Conceptions of Science in International Treaties
  • the ICJ Whaling Case in Context Brendan Gogarty
  • The Antarctic Treaty System: future mining faces many mathematical challenges AJ (Tony) Press
  • Why has there been a 'long peace' in Antarctica? Julia Jabour
  • A SHRED OF BIOGRAPHY OF JORGEN JORGENSEN Einar Mar Gudmundsson
  • Translation by Anna Yates
  • Book Reviews: Antarctica in International Law edited by Ben Saul and Tim Stephens, 2015, Documents in International Law Series, Oxford: Hart Publishing, 932 pp, Paperback ISBN 978 1 84946 731 5, GBP50. Julia Jabour
  • Globalization and 'Minority' Cultures: The Role of 'Minor' Cultural Groups in Shaping Our Global Future edited by Sophie Croisy, 2015, Studies in international minority and group rights, Leiden: Brill Nijhoff, 340pp, Hardback, ISBN13 9789004282070, EURO150. Afroja Khanam
  • International Governance of the Arctic Marine Environment: With Particular Emphasis on High Seas Fisheries, Lilly Weidemann, 2014, Hamburg Studies on Maritime Affairs, Volume 27, Hamburg: Springer, 251 pp, Softcover ISBN 978-3-319-04471-2, US$129. Timo Koivurova
  • The Geopolitics of Natural Resources edited by David Lewis Feldman, 2011, Cheltenham and Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing, 636 pp, illustrated, Hardcover ISBN 978 0 85793 074 3, GBP206.10 online. Michael J. Laiho
  • Transboundary Governance of Biodiversity edited by Louis J. Kotze and Thilo Marauhn, 2014, Leiden: Brill Nijhoff, Hardback ISBN13 9789004273849, 373 pp, EURO138. Jennifer Spence .
巻冊次

v. 8 (2016) : hardback ISBN 9789004324367

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland, Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues re the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. Many of the papers in this volume are based on presentations at the eighth Polar Law Symposium held in the U.S. state of Alaska from September 23-26, 2015.

目次

  • Editorial Note
  • Acknowledgements
  • In Memoriam - Walter B. Parker, 1926-2014 Tribute to Walt Parker Harry Bader
  • Support and Opposition: An Informal History of the Law of the Sea Convention in the United States and Alaska, Including a Tribute to Walter B. Parker Mead Treadwell
  • Responsible Resource Development in Alaska: A Developer's Perspective on the Red Dog Mine Lisa Parker
  • Research Articles Respectful Neighbourliness: The United Kingdom's Arctic Approach Rachael Lorna Johnstone
  • From the High North to the Roof of the World: Arctic Precedents for Third Pole Governance Simon Marsden
  • Understanding Arctic Co-Management: The U.S. Marine Mammal Approach Kathryn Mengerink,David Roche, and Greta Swanson
  • The Greenland Self-Government Act: The Pitfall for the Inuit in Greenland to Remain an Indigenous People? Bent Ole Gram Mortensen and Ulrike Barten
  • An Agreement on Enhancing International Arctic Scientific Cooperation: Only for the Eight Arctic States and Their Scientists? Akiho Shibata and Maiko Raita
  • The Impact of Choice-of-Law Rules in Cross-Border Pollution Damage Caused by Petroleum Spills from Offshore Rigs and Installations: The Case of the Barents Sea Kristoffer Svendsen
  • The Recent Arctic Council Assessments: Influential Tools in Policy-Making in the Council and Beyond? Malgorzata Smieszek, Adam Stepien, and Paula Kankaanpaa
  • The Nordic Welfare State and the Development of Northern Finland Matti Niemivuo and Lotta Viikari
  • Poster Based Articles How Satellites Can Support the Information Requirements of the Polar Code Johnny Groneng Aase and Julia Jabour
  • Essential Fish Habitat Regulation in the United States: Lessons for High Latitudes? Aileen M. Nimick and Bradley P. Harris.
巻冊次

v. 9 (2017) : hardback ISBN 9789004342415

内容説明

The Yearbook of Polar Law is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland, Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues with regard to the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organizations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. The papers in this volume are based on presentations at the ninth symposium in Akureyri in October 2016.
巻冊次

v. 10 (2018) : hardback ISBN 9789004396135

内容説明

Special Editors: Dorothee Cambou (Postdoctoral Researcher, Helsinki University) and Joelle Klein (Junior Researcher, Arctic Centre, University of Lapland) The Yearbook of Polar Law is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland, Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues with regard to the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organisations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. The papers in this volume are based on presentations at the 10th Polar Law Symposium, held in Rovaniemi in November 2017.

目次

Contents Preface The Need to Safeguard an Official Language by Law: The Case of Greenland Hon. Vivian Motzfeldt Two Key Developments in Polar Law and Diplomacy: A New Arctic Science Agreement and Establishment of the World's Largest Marine Protected Area in Antarctica's Ross Sea Evan T. Bloom Indigenous Peoples' Rights Sami's Reindeer Husbandry and EU Legislation (beyond Finland and Sweden's Accession Treaty) Enrico Albanesi Indigenous Persons with Disabilities: The Quest for Legal Recognition of Intersectionality and the Prohibition of Multiple Discrimination using the Example of the Sami People in Finland Leena Heinamaki The Place of Indigenous Languages in the Russian System of School Education: A Legal Analysis Ekaterina Andreyevna Zmyvalova Environment and Cooperation in the Arctic Nordic Cooperation at a Crossroads Matti Niemivuo and Lotta Viikari Region Building and Regional Cooperation in Response to Environmental Challenges: A Case Study from the Barents Region Sarah E. Mackie Comparison of the Nordic Chairmanship Programmes and the Outputs of the Arctic Council in 2000-2013 Paula Kovari Transboundary Environmental Harm in the Arctic - In Search of Accountability for an Oil Spill Outi Penttila Environmental Governance of the Arctic: Next Steps - Diverse, Compatible, Needed Joseph F.C. DiMento, Christine Schrottenbaum and Elizabeth Taylor Digital and Cyber Security Digital Language Divide in the European High North: The Level of Online Presence of Minority Languages from Northern Finland, Norway and Sweden Marcin Dymet The Evolving Information-Based Society and Its Influence on Traditional Culture: Framing Community Culture and Human Security of the Sami in the European High North Kamrul Hossain The Interconnectedness of Digitalisation and Human Security in the European High North: Cybersecurity Conceptualised through the Human Security Lens Gerald Zojer Refocusing and Redefining Cybersecurity: Individual Security in the Digitalising European High North Mirva Salminen China and the Arctic Arctic Governance and China's First Arctic Policy: An UNCLOS Perspective Xueping Li The South China Sea Award: Prompting a Revived Interest in the Validity of Canada's Historic Internal Waters Claim? Krittika Singh and Timo Koivurova Non-Peer Reviewed Articles The 'Greenland Factor' in China's Expanding Arctic Diplomacy Marc Lanteigne China & the Arctic: Why the Focus on International Law Matters Timo Koivurova China's Arctic Policy and Belt and Road Initiative: Synergy or Conflict? Nengye Liu Developing an Iranian Antarctic Science Roadmap: A Legal and Policy Outlook Zia E. Madani and Julia Jabour Book Reviews Indigenous Peoples' Cultural Heritage: Rights, Debates, Challenges Alexandra Xanthaki, Sanna Valkonen, Leena Heinamaki and Piia Nuorgam Environmental Impact Assessment in the Arctic: A Guide to Best Practice Timo Koivurova, Pamela Lesser et al. Global Challenges in the Arctic Region: Sovereignty, Environment and Geopolitical Balance Elena Conde and Sara Iglesias Sanchez Arctic Marine Resource Governance and Development Niels Vestergaard, Brooks A. Kaiser, Linda Fernandez and Joan Nymand Larsen Arctic Law and Governance - The Role of China and Finland Timo Koivurova, Qin Tianbao, Sebastien Duyck and Tapio Nykanen Project Announcements Executive Summary of the HuSArctic Conference Outcomes Research Plan Aland Goeran Lindholm
巻冊次

v. 11 (2019) : hardback ISBN 9789004418745

内容説明

Special Editors: Nigel Bankes (Professor and Chair of Natural Resources Law, The University of Calgary and Adjunct Professor, KG Jebsen Centre for the Law of the Sea (JCLOS), UiT The Arctic University of Norway), Erik J. Molenaar (Deputy Director, Netherlands Institute for the Law of the Sea (NILOS), Utrecht University and Professor, KG Jebsen Centre for the Law of the Sea (JCLOS), UiT The Arctic University of Norway) and Tore Henriksen (Director, KG Jebsen Centre for the Law of the Sea (JCLOS), UiT The Arctic University of Norway). The Yearbook of Polar Law is based at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law at the University of Akureyri in Iceland and the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland, Finland and covers a wide variety of topics relating to the Arctic and the Antarctic. These include: - human rights issues, such as autonomy and self-government vs. self-determination, the rights of indigenous peoples to land and natural resources and cultural rights and cultural heritage, indigenous traditional knowledge, - local, national, regional and international governance issues, - environmental law, climate change, security and environment implications of climate change, protected areas and species, - regulatory, governance and management agreements and arrangements for marine environments, marine mammals, fisheries conservation and other biological/mineral/oil resources, - law of the sea, the retreating sea ice, continental shelf claims, - territorial claims and border disputes on both land and at sea, - peace and security, dispute settlement, - jurisdictional and other issues with regard to the exploration, exploitation and shipping of oil, gas and minerals, bio prospecting, - trade law, potential shipping lines through the northwest and northeast passages, maritime law and transportation law, and - the roles and actual involvement of international organisations in the Polar Regions, such as the Arctic Council, the Antarctic Treaty System, the European Union, the International Whaling Commission, the Nordic Council, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the United Nations, as well as NGOs. The papers in this volume are principally based on presentations at the 11th Polar Law Symposium, held in Tromso, Norway, in October 2018.

目次

Preface Nigel Bankes, Tore Henriksen and Erik Molenaar In Memoriam - Agust THor Arnason, 26 May 1954-11 April 2019 Rachael Lorna Johnstone and Gudmundur Alfredsson Opening Address Ms Aili Keskitalo The Constitutional History of Greenland Speech by the Minister for Mineral Resources, Labour, Interior and Nordic Co-operation Mr Vittus Qujaukitsoq The Arctic: Press, Policy and the Arctic Council Yelena Yermakova Steady as She Goes? Structure, Change Agents, and the Evolution of the Arctic Council Malgorzata (Gosia) Smieszek Arctic Ocean Management and Indigenous Peoples: Recent Legal Developments Nigel Bankes An Icelandic Perspective: Opening the Arctic Ocean Ragnar Baldursson The Role of the Law of the Sea in Climate Change Litigation Elise Johansen Four Principles to Justify Claims to Jurisdiction and to Natural Resources in Antarctica Alejandra Mancilla Denmark's Obligations Regarding Mineral Resources in Greenland Bent Ole Gram Mortensen and Ulrike Fleth-Barten The Greenland Reconciliation Commission: Moving Away from a Legal Framework Astrid Nonbo Andersen Mare Nullius or Mare Suum? Using Ethnography to Debate Rights to Marine Resources in Coastal Sa mi Communities of Troms Apostolos Tsiouvalas History of Polar Law: Professor Atle Grahl-Madsen and the Seminars on the Small Nations of the North Gudmundur Alfredsson, Gun-Mari Lindholm, Goeran Lindholm, and Elisabeth Naucler Book Reviews Paul Arthur Berkman, Alexander N. Vylegzhanin, Oran R Young (eds), Baseline of Russian Arctic Laws Viatcheslav Gavrilov James R May, Erin Daly (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography Joelle Klein Akiho Shibata, Leilei Zou, Nikolas Sellheim and Marzia Scopelliti (eds), Emerging Legal Orders in the Arctic: The Role of Non-Arctic Actors Adam Stepien

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BB00734570
  • ISBN
    • 9789004178410
    • 9789004187870
    • 9789004210776
    • 9789004233966
    • 9789004261785
    • 9789004271548
    • 9789004288904
    • 9789004324367
    • 9789004342415
    • 9789004396135
    • 9789004418745
  • 出版国コード
    ne
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Leiden
  • ページ数/冊数
    v.
  • 大きさ
    25 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
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