Friday, March 6, 2009

Chirop, McDorman, & Rolston: The Future of Ocean Regime-Building

Aldo Chircop (Dalhousie Univ. - Law), Ted McDorman (Univ. of Victoria - Law), & Susan Rolston have published The Future of Ocean Regime-Building Essays in Tribute to Douglas M. Johnston (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 2009). Contents include:
  • Aldo Chircop, Ted L. McDorman, Susan J. Rolston & Christian L. Wiktor, Douglas Millar Johnston (1931–2006) Biographical Note
  • Brian Flemming, Douglas M. Johnston: Postscript for a Polymath
  • Edward L. Miles, Remembering Douglas Johnston as a Practicing Diplomat as well as a Scholar
  • Aldo Chircop, Ted L. McDorman & Susan J. Rolston, Introduction: Setting the Stage
  • Jutta Brunnée, Declaration and the Structure and Processes of International Environmental Law
  • Meinhard Doelle, Integration among Global Environmental Regimes: Lessons Learned from Climate Change Mitigation
  • John Gamble, Ryan Watson & Lauren Piera, Ocean Regimes as Reflected in 500 Years of Multilateral Treaty-Making
  • Jay L. Batongbacal, The Law of the Sea, Marine Technology, and Global Social Justice
  • Stuart Kaye, State Practice and Maritime Claims: Assessing the Normative Impact of the Law of the Sea Convention
  • John Duff, Trends in Ocean Zoning – Layers of Confusion and Approaches to Clarity
  • Jon M. Van Dyke, Transit Passage Through International Straits
  • Robert Beckman, The Establishment of a Cooperative Mechanism for the Straits of Malacca and Singapore under Article 43 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
  • Sam Bateman, The Compulsory Pilotage Regime in the Torres Strait – A “Melting Pot” of Operational, Legal, and Political Considerations
  • Edgar Gold, Northern Sea Route Navigation: The Last Frontier?
  • Hugh M. Kindred & Mary R. Brooks, Consequences of Securing Merchant Shipping for Contractual Relations in the Carriage of Seaborne Trade
  • Moira L. McConnell, “Making Labour History” and the Maritime Labour Convention, 2006: Implications for International Law-Making (and Responses to the Dynamics of Globalization)
  • Peter B. Payoyo, The Contribution of the 2006 ILO Maritime Labour Convention to Global Governance
  • Gordon R. Munro, The Management of Internationally Shared Fish Stocks: A Law and Economics Approach
  • Wendell Sanford, To Catch a Thief: Canadian Law and Practice in the Northwest Atlantic, 1992–1994
  • William R. Edeson, Human Rights Aspects of Legislation in the Fisheries Sector
  • Shelley Lexmond, Improving the Effectiveness of Environmental Regimes: “Consilience,” Science, and Common Sense
  • David L. VanderZwaag & Anne Daniel, International Law and Ocean Dumping: Steering a Precautionary Course Aboard the 1996 London Protocol, but Still an Unfinished Voyage
  • Zou Keyuan, Regulation of the Dumping of Wastes at Sea: The Chinese Practice
  • Aldo Chircop, The Designation of Particularly Sensitive Sea Areas: A New Layer in the Regime for Marine Environmental Protection from International Shipping
  • Alex G. Oude Elferink, Third States in Maritime Delimitation Cases: Too Big a Role, Too Small a Role, or Both?
  • Clive Schofield and Ian Townsend-Gault, Brokering Cooperation Amidst Competing Maritime Claims: Preventative Diplomacy in the Gulf of Thailand and South China Sea
  • Mark J. Valencia, Regime-Building in East Asia: Recent Progress and Problems
  • Ted L. McDorman, Notes on the Historic Waters Regime and the Bay of Fundy
  • Carlyle L. Mitchell, The Legacy of the Dalhousie University Ocean Studies Programme (DOSP) in the Caribbean