划定海洋边界:为什么有些国家觉得这很容易,而有些国家则不然

M. Byers, Andreas Østhagen
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引用次数: 4

摘要

以前被忽视的海洋边界争端正在获得新的经济、政治和学术意义。海平面上升、海洋自然资源分布的变化以及对这些资源不断增长的需求,共同为政策制定、外交和研究创造了一场“完美风暴”。在测量世界海洋边界时,很明显,数百个争端已经解决。然而,国家为什么要解决争端,出于什么动机,往往不清楚。大多数研究将这一过程描述为经济利益驱动下的法律技术问题。正如道格拉斯·约翰斯顿所说,在海洋中划界是一种功能主义:着眼于海洋空间本身的功能使用然而,数百起海上争端仍未得到解决。争端的存在会阻碍诸如石油和天然气等近海资源的经济开发,并使跨界鱼类资源的管理复杂化。在其他情况下,海洋边界争端助长了更大的国际紧张局势和冲突。只要方便,国家并不一定为了功能性的目的而解决边界争端。相反,一些因素可能会阻碍或促进争议的解决。
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Settling Maritime Boundaries: Why Some Countries Find It Easy, and Others Do Not
Previously neglected maritime boundary disputes are acquiring newfound economic, political, and academic significance. Rising sea levels, changing distributions of marine natural resources, and growing demand for those resources have combined to create a ‘perfect storm’ for policy-making, diplomacy, and research. When surveying the world’s maritime boundaries, it becomes clear that hundreds of disputes have been resolved. However, why states resolve their disputes, and with what motivation, is often unclear. Most studies describe the process as a matter of legal technicalities, driven by economic interests. As Douglas Johnston argues, boundary-making in the ocean is functionalist: done with an eye towards the functional usage of the maritime space itself.1 Yet hundreds of maritime disputes remain unresolved. The existence of a dispute can hinder the economic exploitation of offshore resources such as oil and gas and complicate the management of transboundary fish stocks. In other instances, maritime boundary disputes contribute to larger international tensions and conflicts. States do not necessarily resolve boundary disputes for functional purposes whenever it is convenient to do so. Instead, a number of factors may hinder or facilitate dispute resolution.
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Information Matters: Global Perspectives about Communication at the Science-Policy Interface Elisabeth Mann Borgese’s Invisible Hand in Ocean Governance: Past, Present, and Future The Deep Sea Floor as a Battleground for Justice? Settling Maritime Boundaries: Why Some Countries Find It Easy, and Others Do Not The Future of Managing Fisheries and the Global Commons through Regional Fisheries Management Organizations: Steps toward Global Stewardship
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