The South China Sea Arbitration: Innovations in Marine Environmental Fact-Finding and Due Diligence Obligations

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Abstract

The South China Sea Arbitration is a leading case in a new generation of environmental disputes, namely, environmental disputes that occur in disputed territorial or maritime areas. The dispute between the Philippines and China before the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) Annex VII Tribunal (the Tribunal) dealt in significant part with the Philippines' allegations of environmental violations by China. The Philippines asserted that China tolerated harmful fishing practices and proceeded with harmful construction activities, and that both caused serious harm to the marine environment of the South China Sea.

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Mbengue, M. M. (2016). The South China Sea Arbitration: Innovations in Marine Environmental Fact-Finding and Due Diligence Obligations. In AJIL Unbound (Vol. 110, pp. 285–289). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S239877230000917X

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