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Climate change and maritime boundaries : legal consequences of sea level rise /

By: Snjólaug Árnadóttir, 1987-.
Material type: TextTextPublisher: London Cambridge University Press 2021Description: 1 online resource (xx, 247 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).ISBN: 9781009047906 (ebook).Subject(s): Maritime boundaries | Climatic changes -- Law and legislation | Sea level | Continental shelf -- Law and legislation | Submerged lands -- Law and legislationAdditional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification: 341.4/48 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction -- Law of the sea and the changing marine environment -- Unilaterally declared maritime limits -- Maritime delimitation and coastal instability -- Maritime delimitation and the marine environment -- Fundamental change of circumstances -- Conclusion.
Summary: Coastal States exercise sovereignty and sovereign rights in maritime zones, measured from their coasts. The limits to these maritime zones are bound to recede as sea levels rise and coastlines are eroded. Furthermore, ocean acidification and ocean warming are increasingly threatening coastal ecosystems, which States are obligated to protect and manage sustainably. These changes, accelerating as the planet heats, prompt an urgent need to clarify and update the international law of maritime zones. This book explains how bilateral maritime boundaries are established, and how coastal instability and vulnerable ecosystems can affect the delimitation process through bilateral negotiations or judicial settlement. Árnadóttir engages with core concepts within public international law to address emerging issues, such as diminishing territory and changing boundaries. She proposes viable ways of addressing future challenges and sets out how fundamental changes to the marine environment can justify termination or revision of settled maritime boundaries and related agreements.
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Dec 2021).

Introduction -- Law of the sea and the changing marine environment -- Unilaterally declared maritime limits -- Maritime delimitation and coastal instability -- Maritime delimitation and the marine environment -- Fundamental change of circumstances -- Conclusion.

Coastal States exercise sovereignty and sovereign rights in maritime zones, measured from their coasts. The limits to these maritime zones are bound to recede as sea levels rise and coastlines are eroded. Furthermore, ocean acidification and ocean warming are increasingly threatening coastal ecosystems, which States are obligated to protect and manage sustainably. These changes, accelerating as the planet heats, prompt an urgent need to clarify and update the international law of maritime zones. This book explains how bilateral maritime boundaries are established, and how coastal instability and vulnerable ecosystems can affect the delimitation process through bilateral negotiations or judicial settlement. Árnadóttir engages with core concepts within public international law to address emerging issues, such as diminishing territory and changing boundaries. She proposes viable ways of addressing future challenges and sets out how fundamental changes to the marine environment can justify termination or revision of settled maritime boundaries and related agreements.

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