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Who rules the waves? Piracy, overfishing and mining the oceans
Russell, D. (2010). Who rules the waves? Piracy, overfishing and mining the oceans. Pluto Press: London. ISBN 978-0-7453-3004-4. 195 pp.

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    VLIZ: General GEN.120 [103204]

Keywords
    International law > Law of the sea
    Mining
    Overexploitation > Commercial fishing > Overfishing
    Pirate
    Protection
    Water bodies > Oceans
    Marine/Coastal

Author  Top 
  • Russell, D.

Abstract
    With piracy raging in the Indian Ocean, international disputes over undersea oil and gas, and chronic overfishing, the oceans have rarely been subject to such varied and environmentally damaging conflict outside a world war. In Who Rules the Waves? Denise Russell gives us a rare insight into these issues and how they could be resolved. International law states that a coastal country has territorial rights for 12 miles into the sea beyond its coastline, and economic rights for 200 miles, but in practice many countries have virtually no control over their own waters, and there is no international agency powerful enough to settle disputes. Russell provides a thorough examination of the politics of the sea, showing that without a radical change in ocean governance, accelerating climate change and overuse of the sea's resources is likely to have catastrophic effects.

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