内容简介
Part I:Introduction - The Marine Environment and the International Law of the Sea I.1.The Marine Environment
I.2.Economic and Technological Aspects
I.2.a.Development and Transfer of Marine Technology
I.3.An Introduction to the Law of the Sea
I.4.Modern International Law of the Sea:General Aspects
I.5.First and Second U.N.Conferences on the Law of the Sea,1958-1960
I.6.Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea(UNCLOS Ⅲ):General Aspects
I.6.a.UNCLOS Ⅲ:The Sea-Bed Committee(1968 - 1973)
I.6.b.UNCLOS Ⅲ:The Caracas Session(1974)
I.6.c.UNCLOS Ⅲ:The Geneva Session(1975)
I.6.d.UNCLOS Ⅲ:The New York Sessions(1976 - 1977)
I.6.e.UNCLOS Ⅲ:The Geneva Session(March-May 1978)
Part Ⅱ:Maritime Zones and Maritime Jurisdiction
Ⅱ.1 Territorial Sea and Internal Waters:Juridical Status
Ⅱ.1.a.Delimitation of the Territorial Sea
Ⅱ.1.b.Bays and Gulfs
Ⅱ.2.International Waterways:General Aspects
Ⅱ.2.a.Straits
Ⅱ.2.b.Canals
1.The Panama Canal
2.The Suez Canal
Ⅱ.2.c.Innocent Passage
Ⅱ.3.The Contiguous Zone
Ⅱ.4.The Exclusive Economic Zone
Ⅱ.5.The Continental Shelf:Juridical Status
Ⅱ.5.a.Definition - The Outer Limit of the Continental Shelf
Ⅱ.5.b.Continental Shelf Resources
Ⅱ.5.c.Delimitation of the Continental Shelf Between Opposite and Adjacent States
1.General
2.The North Sea Continental Shelf Cases
3.The Aegean Sea Continental Shelf Dispute
Ⅱ.6.The High Seas
Ⅱ.6.a.Navigation and Shipping
Ⅱ.6.b.Slavery
Ⅱ.6.c.Piracy
Ⅱ.6.d.Unauthorised Broadcasting from the High Seas
Ⅱ.6.e.Hot Pursuit
Ⅱ.7.Land-Locked States
Ⅱ.8.Archipelagoes
Ⅱ.9.Islands
Ⅱ.10.Artificial Islands and Installations
Ⅱ.11.Enclosed and Semi-Enclosed Seas
Ⅱ.12.The Polar Regions
Ⅱ.13.Marine Archaeology
Part Ⅲ:The Legal Regime of the Sea-Bed and Subsoil Beyond the Limits of National Jurisdiction
Ⅲ.1.The Legal Status of the Deep Sea-Bed and Subsoil Under International Customary Law
Ⅲ.2.Present Legal Status of Deep Sea Mining and Proposed Regimes
Ⅲ.3.An International Machinery for the Deep Sea-Bed
Part Ⅳ:Marine Resources
Ⅳ.1.General
Ⅳ.2.Living Resources
Ⅳ.2.a.General Aspects
Ⅳ.2.b.Biological,Technological and Economic Aspects
Ⅳ.2.c.The Geneva Convention on Fishing and Conservation of the Living Resources of the High Seas,1958
Ⅳ.2.d.International Fisheries Organisations and Regional Conventions
Ⅳ.2.e.Icelandic Fisheries
Ⅳ.2.f.E.E.C.Fisheries Policy
Ⅳ.2.g.UNCLOS Ⅲ and Fisheries
Ⅳ.3.Aquaculture
Ⅳ.4.Mineral Resources
Ⅳ.4.a.General Aspects
Ⅳ.4.b.Off shore Oil and Gas
Ⅳ.4.c.Manganese Nodules
Part Ⅴ:Protection and Preservation of the Marine Environment
Ⅴ.1.General Aspects
Ⅴ.2.Ocean Pollution from Ships
Ⅴ.3.Marine Pollution Resulting from the Exploration and Exploitation of Sea-Bed Resources
Ⅴ.4.Radioactive Pollution
Ⅴ.5.Ocean Dumping
Ⅴ.6.Marine Pollution from Land-Based Sources
Ⅴ.7.Liability for Marine Pollution
Part Ⅵ:Marine Scientific Research
Ⅵ.1.The Freedom of Scientific Research
Ⅵ.2.Ocean Data Acquisition Systems(ODAS)
Ⅵ.3.The Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission(IOC)
Part Ⅶ:Military Uses and Arms Control
Ⅶ.1.General Aspects
Ⅶ.2.Nuclear Tests and the Freedom of the High Seas
Ⅶ.3.The Sea-Bed Treaty,11 February 1971
Ⅶ.4.The Treaty of Tlatelolco,14 February 1967
Ⅶ.5.The Test Ban Treaty,5 August 1963
Ⅶ.6.The Pueblo and Mayaguez Incidents
Ⅶ.7.The Indian Ocean
Ⅶ.8.The Mediterranean
Ⅶ.9.Soviet Union
Ⅶ.10.United Kingdom
Ⅶ.11.United States
Part Ⅷ:Ocean Policy Making
Ⅷ.1.National Policies on Ocean Affairs
1.Australia
2.Belgium
3.Canada
4.China(People's Republic of)
5.Federal Republic of Germany
6.France
7.India
8.Indonesia
9.Italy
10.Japan
11.New Zealand
12.Nigeria
13.Norway
14.Romania
15.Soviet Union
16.United Kingdom
17.United States
Ⅷ.2.Regional Approaches
1.The Baltic Sea
2.The European Economic Community(E.E.C.)
3.Latin America
4.The Persian Gulf
Ⅷ.3.Developing Countries and the Law of the Sea
Part Ⅸ:Settlement of Disputes
Appendix:Bibliographies on the Law of the Sea and Marine Affairs
Author Index
Index of Documents,Conferences,Reports,Declarations,Resolutions,Anonymous Publications,etc.
Subject Index