LAWS2224 International Law Elective: Law of the Sea
Later Year Course
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Offered By
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Law
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Academic Career
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Undergraduate
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Course Subject
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Laws
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Offered in
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LAWS2224 will not be offered in 2010
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Unit Value
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6 units
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Course Description
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| | A participant who has successfully completed this course should: - have a clear understanding of the evolution, and current status of the various jurisdictional zones and regimes that currently govern the utilisation of the world's oceans, and of the underlying policy considerations that led to the adoption of the compromises reflected in the contemporary Law of the Sea
- be capable of applying the relevant legal norms to practical situations.
The course will focus on the impact of the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea and more recent supplementary agreements in the light of current State practice, seeking to identify, in particular, the extent to which its provisions have become part of customary international law in that area. Addressed will be the history of Law of the Sea concepts; internal waters, territorial waters and the regime of innocent passage; the contiguous zone; transit passage through straits used for international navigation; islands, archipelagoes and the regime of archipelagic sealanes passage; the Exclusive Economic Zone; the Continental Shelf; recent developments in delimitation of maritime zones; the high seas and the management of High Seas fisheries; deep-seabed mining and the International Area. |
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Indicative Assessment
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The proposed means of assessment for this course will provide students with the option of undertaking at least two pieces of assessment, including one piece during the semester. Details of the final assessment will be provided on the course home page by the first week of semester.
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Workload
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Three hours per week.
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Areas of Interest
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Law
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Requisite Statement
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International Law LAWS2250. (This course is capped at 25). Completed or completing five LAWS courses at 1000 level.
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Prescribed Texts
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Please refer to LAWS2224 course home page.
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The information published on the Study at ANU 2010 website applies to the 2010 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2009 website.