Seaports in international law /
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Author / Creator: | Casagrande, Marco, author. |
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Imprint: | Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2017] ©2017 |
Description: | 1 online resource |
Language: | English |
Series: | Springer briefs in law SpringerBriefs in law. |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12455446 |
Table of Contents:
- Part I
- Introduction: 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
- Part II
- The Pre-Industrial Port: 4 Paolo Sarpi's Legal Doctrine
- 5 The Colonial Factories
- Part III
- The Industrial Port: 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
- Part IV
- The Port of Globalization: 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
- Part V
- Assessment and Perspectives: 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.