Maritime Sovereignty, Rights, and Cooperation

  • Østhagen A
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Abstract

Maritime issues have been climbing the political agendas since the early 2000s. This chapter explores the foundational background for how and why states acquired rights at sea in the first place, and how this fit with various conceptualisations of the maritime domain. It maps how states' rights at sea came about more generally, and how the ocean differs from land in terms of sovereign rights and legal institutionalisation throughout the twentieth century. Concepts such as ocean governance, territorial waters, the EEZ and the continental shelf, as well as UNCLOS (Law of the Sea), are explained and discussed. Finally, this chapter turns to examine how and why states cooperate at sea, based on theories from the field of international relations.

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Østhagen, A. (2020). Maritime Sovereignty, Rights, and Cooperation. In Coast Guards and Ocean Politics in the Arctic (pp. 11–24). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-0754-0_2

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