Seaports in international law /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Casagrande, Marco, author.
Imprint:Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2017]
©2017
Description:vi, 114 pages ; 24 cm.
Language:English
Series:Springer briefs in law
SpringerBriefs in law.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11452685
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9783319603957
3319603957
Notes:Includes bibliographical references.
Summary:"This is the first book to offer a comprehensive overview of modern seaports from a legal perspective. Further, it provides a basic toolkit for establishing a legal doctrine of seaports, the instruments of said toolkit being the very few legal norms specifically targeting seaports, which are examined as such rather than through the lens of other, more established disciplines, such as the law of the sea or transportation law. It is a first, necessary step toward giving seaports the status they rightfully deserve in legal studies. Despite centuries of international law studies and decades of EU law evolution, seaports have remained stuck in limbo. From a law of the sea perspective, seaports belong to the land, an approach that is often clearly reflected in national maritime legislation. The other branches of international law do not focus on seaports, since they are considered to belong to the sea. The port communities, for their part, have availed themselves of the "port specificity" concept. In recent decades, containerization has transformed ports into key hubs of the globalized economy, but also into vital checkpoints of the War on Terror, due to the security risks posed by the millions of sealed containers circulating worldwide. Moreover, tragic maritime incidents have shown that seaports are the only reliable sentinels of the seas, being the only places where the systematic inspection of ships is feasible. This has led to the adoption of specific international and EU rules. Those rules, however, remain fragmented, highly specialized and technical; as such, they are unsuitable for creating an organic legal seaport regime: this objective can only be achieved with a significant contribution from legal doctrine"--Provided by publisher.

MARC

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505 0 |a 1. The Lack of Interest for Seaports in the International Law and Doctrine -- 2. The Port and the International Law in General : A Land Appendix -- 3. The Port and the Law of the Sea : An Accessory to the Waters -- 4. Paolo Sarpi's Legal Doctrine -- 5. The Colonial Factories -- 6. The Longshoremen's Organizations -- 7. The 1923 Geneva Convention on Seaports -- 8. The Forgotten Ports and Port Installations : Lotus Case, Wimbledon Case, Suez Crisis -- 9. When You Are Forced to Remember the Port : The Laws of Wars from the Hague Conventions to the Cuban Crisis -- 10. The Mar del Plata Convention -- 11. The Montego Bay Convention -- 12. An Unprecedented Economic Significance and the Ascendance of the Multinational Terminal Operators -- 13. The Decline of the Longshoremen's Organizations and Their Resistance in Europe -- 14. Flags of Convenience and Port State Control -- 15. Port Security : The Dubai Ports World Case and the ISPS Code -- 16. From the Traditional to the Multimodal Seaport : The Right to Access -- 17. Seaports in International Commercial Law -- 18. Common Features in the International Regulation of Seaports -- 19. A Contribution from Private International Law and some Municipal Legal Orders -- 20. Starting from a Unitary Notion of Port. 
520 |a "This is the first book to offer a comprehensive overview of modern seaports from a legal perspective. Further, it provides a basic toolkit for establishing a legal doctrine of seaports, the instruments of said toolkit being the very few legal norms specifically targeting seaports, which are examined as such rather than through the lens of other, more established disciplines, such as the law of the sea or transportation law. It is a first, necessary step toward giving seaports the status they rightfully deserve in legal studies. Despite centuries of international law studies and decades of EU law evolution, seaports have remained stuck in limbo. From a law of the sea perspective, seaports belong to the land, an approach that is often clearly reflected in national maritime legislation. The other branches of international law do not focus on seaports, since they are considered to belong to the sea. The port communities, for their part, have availed themselves of the "port specificity" concept. In recent decades, containerization has transformed ports into key hubs of the globalized economy, but also into vital checkpoints of the War on Terror, due to the security risks posed by the millions of sealed containers circulating worldwide. Moreover, tragic maritime incidents have shown that seaports are the only reliable sentinels of the seas, being the only places where the systematic inspection of ships is feasible. This has led to the adoption of specific international and EU rules. Those rules, however, remain fragmented, highly specialized and technical; as such, they are unsuitable for creating an organic legal seaport regime: this objective can only be achieved with a significant contribution from legal doctrine"--Provided by publisher. 
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