2017 



Working Group on Living Marine Resources. Principles of a Global Fisheries 

 Management Regime. Studies in Transnational Legal Policy, No. 4, May 1974: 

 29 p. 



"Sets forth principles agreed to by an expert interdisciplinary working 

 group of the Society for the use of the Law of the Sea Conference and others 

 concerned with the rational management of the Living Resources of the Sea. 

 The principles concern the rationale, goals, and components of a management 

 regime, dispute avoidance, and problems of enforcement." The Group was 

 composed of members of the American Society for International Law. 

 Supported by NSF RANN award: GI-29927. 



C. Law of the Sea Conference 



Brown, Seyom and Larry Brown. "Diplomats at Sea." Foreign Affairs, v. 52 

 no. 2, Jan. 1974: 301-321. 



Discusses factors which should enter into the U.S. position at the 1974 

 Law of the Sea Conference. "In its unfolding ocean diplomacy, the United 

 States must face two realities: it will not get all that it wants, and it will 

 have to cooperate intensively with many other nations in order to get what it 

 can .... This Conference must leave future ocean negotiators with a 

 legacy of accommodation and mutual trust in ocean affairs^ not a residue of 

 bitterness left by confrontationist diplomacy." 

 Christy, Francis T., Jr., et. al. Law of the Sea: Caracas and Beyond. Cambridge, 

 Ballinger, 1975. 416 p. 



Contains the proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference, Law of the 

 Sea Institute. 

 Friedheim, Robert L. and Mary E. Jehn. "Anticipating Soviet Behavior at the 

 Third U.N. Law of the Sea Conference; U.S.S.R. Positions and Dilemmas." 

 Professional paper 124, August 1974. 45 p. Available from the State Dept. as 

 FAR 20152-P. 

 Friedmann, Wolfgang. The Future of the Oceans. New York, George Braziller, 

 1971. 132 p. 



Presents case against expanding national claims to large offshore areas, 

 and discusses freedom of the seas; creeping jurisdiction; marine resources; 

 Truman Proclamation; Geneva Convention; and Third Law of the Sea 

 Conference. 

 Goldie, L. S. E. "International Law of the Sea: a Review of States' Offshore 

 Claims and Competences." Naval War College Review, v. 24, Feb. 1972: 43-66. 

 "The problems of formulating effective concepts for managing states' 

 offshore claims and competences is well appreciated by the international 

 community. . . . Here, the author reviews many of the essential rules, 

 legal fictions, and institutions that deal with the problem, and also examines 

 some of the novel claims that states have made in their effort to exercise 

 exclusive authority over offshore areas." 

 Hollick, Ann L. "What to Expect From a Sea Treaty." Foreign Policy, no. 18, 

 spring 1975: 68-80. 



Summary of issues to be discussed at the mid-March 1975 conference. 

 Law of the Sea Institute. University of Rhode Island. "Law of the Sea 

 Briefing: Reflections on the Caracas Session of the United Nations Law of 

 the Sea Conference." Occasional Paper no. 24, partially supported by NOAA, 

 ONR, and USCG, December 1974. 47 p. Available from the State Depart- 

 ment as FAR 22495-P. 

 Xay, S. Houston, Robin Churchill, and Myron Nordquist. New Directions in the 

 Law of the Sea. Dobbs Ferry, New York, Oceana Publications, Inc., The British 

 Institute of International and Comparative Law, London, 1973, vol. I, 502 p. 

 Collection of documents on national legislation; bilateral and multilateral 

 agreements; territorial seas; fishing limits; fisherj^ conservation zones; OCS; 

 pollution; regulation of marine activities; high seas; military activities; 

 and seabed activities. 

 Logan, P. M. Canada, the United Slates, and the Third Law of the Sea Conference. 

 [Montreal] Canadian-American Committee [1974] 122 p. 



"... A study that would provide a background survey of the major 

 issues at the Conference, the Canadian and U.S. positions on these issues, 

 and bilateral Canada-U.S. offshore concerns." 

 Logue, John, (ed.) The Fate of the Oceans. Villanova, Pennsylvania, Villanova 

 University Press, 1972. 237 p. 



U.N. debates; pollution; law of the sea; U.S. system and the ocean 

 regime. 



