How to translate text using browser tools
9 February 2016 International Public Law and the Failure to Efficiently Manage Ocean Living Resources
Paul Hallwood
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

This article enquires into why the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Fish Stocks Agreement have failed to provide an adequate legal framework for effective management of high-seas living resources. This failure is due to the nature of the international legal framework that requires signatories only to “cooperate” but how to cooperate remains a choice variable. The result is that if it suits them, signatories take ‘reservations’ (e.g., on whether to abide by catch quotas in Regional Fisheries Management Organizations) with the effect that they continue to ‘play’ non-cooperatively. It is argued that environmental groups, such as Greenpeace, have an important role to play in aligning moral precepts and one day, perhaps, creating a coordination game between fishing nations in which ‘reservations’ are no longer taken.

JEL Code: K3.

© 2016 MRE Foundation, Inc. All rights reserved.
Paul Hallwood "International Public Law and the Failure to Efficiently Manage Ocean Living Resources," Marine Resource Economics 31(2), 131-139, (9 February 2016). https://doi.org/10.1086/685287
Received: 24 July 2014; Accepted: 1 September 2015; Published: 9 February 2016
JOURNAL ARTICLE
9 PAGES

This article is only available to subscribers.
It is not available for individual sale.
+ SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

KEYWORDS
customary international law
Fisheries economics
international law
jus cogens
moral values
treaty law
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top