Readership: Scholars and students of international law with particular interest in international resource management in both legal and international relations camps.
Edited by Olav Schram Stokke, Research Director, Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Norway
O. S. Stokke: Introduction High Seas Fisheries in International Law 1: F. Orrego Vicuña: The International Law of High Seas Fisheries: From Freedom of Fishing to Sustainable Use 2: B. Vukas and D. Vidas: Flags of Convenience and High Seas Fishing: The Emergence of a Legal Framework 3: A. E. Boyle: Problems of Compulsory Jurisdiction and the Settlement of Disputes Relating to Straddling Fish Stocks 4: G. Honneland: Recent Global Agreements on High Seas Fisheries: Potential Effects on Fisherman Compliance Regional Approaches to Straddling Stocks Management 5: D. A. Balton: The Bering Sea Doughnut Hole Convention: Regional Solution, Global Implications 6: A. G. Oude Elferink: The Sea of Okhotsk Peanut Hole: De facto Extension of Coastal State Control 7: C. C. Joyner: On the Borderline? Canadian Activism in the Grand Banks 8: R. Churchill: Managing Straddling Fish Stocks in the North East Atlantic: A Multiplicity of Instruments and Regime Linkages—But How Effective a Management? 9: O. S. Stokke: The Loophole of the Barents Sea Fisheries Regime 10: R. Herr: The International Regulation of Patagonian Toothfish: CCAMLR and High Seas Fisheries Management O. S. Stokke: Conclusions Index