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INTERNATIONAL STRAIT (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   072475


International law and the November 2004 "Han Incident" / Dutton, Peter A   Journal Article
Dutton, Peter A Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract The Ishigaki Strait is an international strait by the terms of the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention, but for national security reasons it is not recognized as such by the Japanese government, which advocates a narrower definition of what constitutes an international strait in which the right of transit passage applies. China, as a traditional land power with tradinationally weak maritime forces, has historically agreed with Japan's limitations on access through such straits. As China's maritime strength grows, it has increasingly greater interest in access to ocean spaces. However, because of tension and poor coordination between its military and foreign policy bureaucracies, China missed an opportunity during the diplomatic crisis in November 2004 to align its position on maritime law with its strategic interests.
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2
ID:   128285


Steering between Scylla and Charybdis: the Northwest Passage as territorial sea / Steinberg, Philip E   Journal Article
Steinberg, Philip E Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Heightened attention is being paid to the Northwest Passage, the waters that flow among the islands of northern Canada and that, in the next decades, may be amenable to commercial navigation. Most debates regarding the Passage's legal status focus on Canada's contention that it is its internal waters and the United States' contention that it is an international strait. This article proposes that a designation of the Passage as Canada's territorial sea would be as legally robust as the internal waters or international strait designations while satisfying both Canada's and the United States' political objectives.
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