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CHIRCOP, ALDO (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   108589


Managing adjacency: some legal aspects of the relationship between the extended continental shelf and the international seabed area / Chircop, Aldo   Journal Article
Chircop, Aldo Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (1973-1982) struck a difficult compromise between the definition of the outer limits of the extended continental shelf (ECS) in relation to the international seabed area (the Area) and the making of payments and contributions by the coastal state in relation to production activities on its ECS in Article 82. The implementation of Article 82 underscores a broader and more far-reaching relationship between the continental shelf, and the ECS in particular, and the Area. In some regions there may be a relationship between the exclusive economic zone and the Area, where there is no ECS. Effectively, the relationship translates into realities and expectations of good neighborliness. This article examines this relationship and the possible approaches for the management of identified challenges.
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2
ID:   048385


Ocean yearbook v.13 / Borgese, Elisabeth Mann (ed.); Chircop, Aldo (ed.); McConnell, Moira (ed.); Morgan, Joseph R. (ed.) 1998  Book
Borgese, Elisabeth Mann Book
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Publication Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1998.
Description xviii, 771p.
Standard Number 0226066169
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
041847551.4605/BOR 041847MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   114642


Prospects for transboundary marine protected areas in East Afri / Grilo, Catarina; Chircop, Aldo; Guerreiro, Jose   Journal Article
Chircop, Aldo Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Transboundary marine protected areas have been proposed in East Africa to tackle threats to marine biodiversity, meet international MPA targets, promote tourism, and contribute to poverty reduction. This article examines what may drive, facilitate, or constrain states in creating a regime for transboundary MPAs. In East Africa, a regime between Mozambique and Tanzania is not yet formed and may be indefinitely delayed due to oil prospecting and exploration. There is, however, a well-developed regime between Mozambique and South Africa that has resulted in the two adjoining MPAs being declared the first transboundary MPA on the continent.
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