2083 



Borgese, Elisabeth Mann. A Ten- Year Struggle for Law of the Sea. Center Maga- 

 zine, V. 10, May-June 1977: 52-62. 



Looks -back on the ten-year struggle to resolve the international question 

 of ownership of the ocean floor and the resources to be found there. 

 Charney, Jonathan I. "The International Regime for the Deep Seabed: Past Con- 

 flicts and Proposals for Progress." Harvard International Law Journal, v. 17, 

 winter 1976: 1-50. 



Article deals with the conflicting positions taken at the Law of the Sea 

 Conference on setting up the International Seabed Authority to control 

 marine resources. 

 Clarkson, Kenneth W. "International Law, U.S. Seabeds Policy and Ocean 

 Resource Development." Journal of Law & Economics, v. 17, Apr. 1975: 117-142. 

 "In this paper alternative proposals for the efficient development and use of 

 the oceans' services and resources are examined and appraised. Primary 

 attention will be given to the U.S. Government's proposed draft treaty articles 

 for a coastal seabed economic area for the United Nations conference on the 

 law of the seas to be held in 1974 and 1975." 

 Cochran, Charles L. Keeping the Seas Clean: An International Concern. United 

 States Naval Institute proceedings, v. 101, Feb. 1975: 97-100. 



"Attempts to provide international standards for pollution control in 



territorial seas have been consistently beaten back as being incompatible 



with the sovereign jurisdication of the coastal nation over her own territory — 



limited only by the right of innocent passage." 



Cooper, Richard N. "An Economist's View of the Oceans." Journal of World 



Trade Law, v. 9, July- Aug. 1975: 357-377. 



Article indicates "how one economist, not an expert on oceans or any of its 



particular aspects, looks at this relatively new range of issues and what 



guidance he would offer for future management of the resources of the oceans." 



Costlow, John D., Dana R. Kester, Frank T. Manheim, and Dennis S. Polls. 



Evaluation of the International Decade of Ocean Exploration: A National Science 



Foundation Research Program. Prepared for the National Science Foundation. 



November 1976, 300 p. (Availal)le as NTIS PB-265 729/4SL.) 



The report is an evaluation of the research sponsored by the National 



Science Foundation for the International Decade of Ocean Exploration 



(IDOE). The evaluation assesses the progress that each IDOE project has 



made toward accomplishing its objectives and the degree to which the results 



of projects have contributed or have the potential for contributing to the 



broad goals of the IDOE. The study was conducted during 1975-76 at the 



mid-point of the decade. 



Eckert, Ross D. "Exploitation of Deep Ocean Minerals: Regulatory Mechanisms 



and United States Policy." Journal of Law cfe Economics, v. 17, Apr. 1975: 



143-177. 



"The purpose of this paper is to apply economic analysis to available 

 information concerning the nature and mining of nodules to determine (1) 

 whether some form of regulation will promote their efficient exploitation, 

 and (2) if so, what powers the regulatory authority should possess." 

 Evans, Emmit B., Jr. "Marine Scientific and Technological Assistance to Develop- 

 ing Countries: Science for Development or Technology for Malintegrated 

 Growth?" Economic Development and Cultural Change, v. 24, Jan. 1976: 375- 

 385. 



"With Third World governments likely to soon control access to much of 



the ocean space within which marine scientists work, U.S. oceanographers 



are making ready for the day when assistance in the building of indigenous 



Third World technoscientific capabilities will become the standard quid 



pro quo for clearance to conduct scientific research in Third World waters." 



Frank, Richard A. Deepsea Mining and the Environment. Report of the Working 



Group on Environmental Regulation of Deepsea Mining. St. Paul, West Pub. 



Co. [1976] 54 p. (Studies in transnational legal policy, no. 10). 



"... This study deals with the way in which the United States government 

 might effectively address the environmental aspects of a deepsea mining 

 regime. . . . The last part of the study addresses some of the international 

 ramifications of the development of an environmental regime for deepsea 

 mining, and calls for the involvement of other governments in the process, 

 both through the use of their own legal and administrative systems and 

 through the development of an international regime." 



