Islands and the International Law of the Sea
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Date
Authors
Rothwell, Donald
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Publisher
ANU College of Law
Abstract
Islands have a central place in the law of the sea because they are land from which coastal States
are able to assert a range of maritime claims consistent with UNCLOS. The significance of
islands is reflected in a single article of UNCLOS – Article 121 which creates a ‘Regime of
Islands’. Recently Article 121 has been the subject of review by international courts and
tribunals, including the 2016 South China Sea Arbitration. This has resulted in new insights
and clarifications regarding Article 121 and further emphasised the importance of this provision
in UNCLOS. Islands are also important for the manner in which they permit certain coastal
States to declare themselves as Archipelagic States, and how they can be relied upon for the
drawing of straight and archipelagic baselines. They also have had an important impact upon
the distinctive law and practice that has evolved with respect to maritime boundary delimitation.
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Book Title
'Sobre Derecho Del Mar' (Law of the Sea)
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DOI
Restricted until
2099-12-31
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