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The Routledge Handbook of Polar Law: Routledge Handbooks in Law

Editat de Yoshifumi Tanaka, Rachael Johnstone, Vibe Ulfbeck
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 iul 2023
Polar law describes the normative frameworks that govern the relationships between humans, States, Peoples, institutions, land and resources in the Arctic and the Antarctic. These two regions are superficially similar in terms of natural environmental conditions but the overarching frameworks that apply are fundamentally different. The Routledge Handbook of Polar Law explores the legal orders in the Arctic and Antarctic in a comparative perspective, identifying similarities as well as differences. It points to a distinct discipline of "Polar law" as the body of rules governing actors, spaces and institutions at the Poles. Four main features define the collection: the Arctic-Antarctic interface; the interaction between global, regional and domestic legal regimes; the rights of Indigenous Peoples; and the increasing importance of private law. While these broad themes have been addressed to varying extents elsewhere, the editors believe that this Handbook brings them together to create a comprehensive (if never exhaustive) account of what constitutes Polar law today. Leading scholars in public international and private law as well as experts in related fields come together to offer unique insights into polar law as a burgeoning discipline.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780367711702
ISBN-10: 0367711702
Pagini: 734
Ilustrații: 6
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Greutate: 1.52 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Handbooks in Law

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Academic and Postgraduate

Cuprins

List of maps
List of contributors
Acknowledgements

1. Polar Law as Burgeoning Discipline
Rachael Johnstone, Yoshifumi Tanaka, and Vibe Ulfbeck
Part One: International Legal Order in the Polar Regions
Section A. Legal Regimes governing the Polar Regions
2. Polar Legal System
Yoshifumi Tanaka, Rachael Johnstone, and Vibe Ulfbeck
3. Territorial Claims to Antarctica
Patrizia Vigni
4. Challenges Relating to Baselines in Polar Regions
Suzanne Lalonde and Clive Schofield
5. Maritime Boundary Delimitation in the Polar Regions
Bjarni Már Magnússon and Snjólaug Árnadóttir
6. The Jurisdiction of Coastal States in Ice-Covered Waters
Suzanne Lalonde and Ted L McDorman
7. Navigational Rights and Freedoms in the Polar Regions
Erik Franckx
8. Scientific Research in the Polar Regions
Betsy Baker
9. The Changing Maritime Security Landscape in the Polar Regions
Sophia Galani
10. International Dispute Settlement and the Polar Regions
Donald R Rothwell


Section B. Environmental Protection of the Polar Regions
11. Two Models on Environmental Protection of the Polar Regions
Yoshifumi Tanaka
12. Environmental Impact Assessment in the Polar Regions
Romain Chuffart and Julia Jabour
13. Climate Change and Polar Regions
Tim Stephens
14. Protection of Biological Diversity in the Polar Regions by Marine Protected Areas
Ingvild Ulrikke Jakobsen
15. Wilderness Protection in the Polar Regions
Antje Neumann
Section C. Polar Resource Management
16. Regulation of Fisheries in Polar Regions
Rosemary Rayfuse
17. Marine Mammals in the Polar Regions
Malgosia Fitzmaurice and Rob C Steenkamp
18. International Regulation of Mineral Resources Activities in the Polar Regions
Alan D Hemmings and Timo Koivurova
Part Two: Regional Issue of International Institutions and Actors
Section A. Institutional Approach to the Polar Governance
19. The IMO and Outstanding Maritime Safety and Environmental Issues under the Polar Code
Marel Katsivela
20. The International Seabed Authority and the Polar Regions
Edwin Egede
21. The Arctic Council and its "Legislative" Activities
Natalia Loukacheva
22. The Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meetings as a Forum of Law-Making
Luis Valentín Ferrada 
Section B. Rights of Indigenous Peoples
23. Colonisation at the Poles, Incomplete Decolonisation and the Creation of Indigenous Peoples
Rachael Lorna Johnstone
24. Indigenous Rights and Human rights
Paul Patton
25. The Girjas Saami Case: Indigenous Peoples’ Right to Dispose Freely of Natural Resources
Jan Mikael Lundmark
26. Natural Resource Development in the Arctic and the Question of Sami Land Rights in Finland
Juha Joona and Tanja Joona
Section C. Special Issues
27. The Evolving Constitution of Greenland
Helle Kunke, Natuk Lund Olsen, Manasse Lars Mikaelsen and Sune Klinge
28. Svalbard
Tore Henriksen
29. Japan and the Polar Region
Kentaro Nishimoto
30. China and the Polar Region
Nengye Liu, Sanna Kopra and Jiliang Chen
Part Three: Private Governance in the Polar Legal System
Section A. Natural resources
31. Mineral Exploitation Licences in Greenland. The Modification Issue
Rasmus Grønved Nielsen and Vibe Ulfbeck

32. Sustainable development in contract law. Greenland Impact Benefit Agreements (IBAs)
Lone Wandahl Mouyal
33. Meaningful stakeholder consultation and social impact assessment
Karin Buhmann
34. Corporate Governance and Native Alaskan Corporations
Grant Christensen
35. Mutually Agreed Terms, Arctic Genetic Resources and Private International Law
David Leary
36. China’s Investment treaties with the Arctic States: time for revision?
Maxim Usynin
Section B. Shipping in the Polar regions
37. Charterparty Contracts and Clauses for Arctic Shipping
Richard L. Kilpatrick
38. Oil Pollution Liability for Polar Shipping
Erik Røsæg
39. Polar cruise ship tourism and liability for injuries of passengers and workers – are they in the same boat?
Vibe Ulfbeck and Marlene Louise Buch Andersen
40. Shipping, Insurance and the Polar Code
Trine-Lise Wilhemsson and Hans Jacob Bull

Notă biografică

Yoshifumi Tanaka is Professor of International Law, with specific focus on the law of the sea, at the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. He is a member of the Centre for Private Governance (CEPRI) and the Research Group SHOC (Shipping and Ocean Law). He holds a DES and a PhD from the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva (currently the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva) and a LLM from Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo. He is the single author of five books: Predictability and Flexibility in the Law of Maritime Delimitation (Hart Publishing 2006; 2nd edn 2019), A Dual Approach to Ocean Governance: The Cases of Zonal and Integrated Management in International Law of the Sea (Ashgate 2008), The International Law of the Sea (1st edition, Cambridge University Press 2012; 3rd edn 2019; 4th edn forthcoming), The Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes (Cambridge University Press 2018) and The South China Sea Arbitration: Toward an International Legal Order in the Oceans (Hart Publishing, 2019). He has published widely in the fields of the law of the sea, international environmental law and peaceful settlement of international disputes.
Rachael Lorna Johnstone is professor of law at the University of Akureyri, Iceland and professor of law at Ilisimatusarfik (University of Greenland). Rachael Johnstone grew up on the north coast of Scotland before studying law at the University of Glasgow, European Academy of Legal Theory in Brussels, and the University of Toronto. Her legal education is of the western model, a mix of common law and civil law traditions. It is to her discredit that despite studying for eight years in three countries with colonial histories, she graduated from each of them with very little knowledge of colonialism or Indigenous law. She took up a teaching post at the University of Akureyri, Iceland in 2003 where she has since been based. In 2011, she enrolled in the university’s masters programme in Polar law and began to specialise increasingly in that field. Rachael has also taught and conducted research in various capacities at Ilisimatusarfik (the University of Greenland) since 2011 and she has learned a great deal from Inuit scholars, not least her Greenlandic students. In the past decade, she has turned her attention increasingly to the rights of Indigenous Peoples amid broader questions of decolonisation of international law. This entails conscious ‘unlearning’ of many of the assumptions of and about international law that constrained her earlier research. She does not presume to speak on behalf of Indigenous Peoples or present an Indigenous viewpoint.
Vibe Ulfbeck is a professor of private law with a special focus on maritime law at the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. She is the director of CEPRI, Centre for Private Governance, Head of the Research Group SHOC (Shipping and Ocean Law) and founder of the Sustainability Hub at the Law Faculty. She has written extensively on contract law, tort law and maritime law issues and takes a special interest in the role of private actors in carrying out public interest tasks. She is the author of a number of articles concerning the exploitation of minerals in the Arctic and the co-editor of the books Responsibilities and Liabilities for Commercial Activity in the Arctic - The Example of Greenland (Routledge 2016), Law and Responsible Supply Chain Management – Contract and Tort, Interplay and Overlap (Routledge 2019) and Maritime Organisation, Management and Liability – A Legal Analysis of New Challenges in the Maritime Industry (Hart 2021).

Descriere

Polar law describes the normative frameworks that govern the relationships between humans, States, Peoples, institutions, land and resources in the Arctic and the Antarctic.