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Category: Territory

Nicaragua v Colombia: An Unusual Delimitation?

January 4, 2013 Naomi Burke

Before analysing certain aspects of the decision, it is worth noting the Colombian reaction to the maritime delimitation. President Juan…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Land, Sea and Water, Territory

The Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands: Two Perspectives on the Territorial Dispute (Part II)

December 18, 2012 Jaiyu Bai

Japan’s ‘nationalization’ and other arguments are unfounded under international law First of all, Diaoyu Dao was not ‘terra nullius’. It…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Sea and Water, Territory

The Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands: Two Perspectives on the Territorial Dispute (Part I)

December 7, 2012 Mai Fujii

PART I: THE SENKAKU ISLANDS The Senkaku islands consist of five inhabited islands and three barren rocks located in the…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Sea and Water, Territory

Let flow all the waters? – The Indus Waters Kishenganga Arbitration

December 5, 2012 Valentin Jeutner

The Permanent Court of Arbitration (‘PCA’) is expected to render its decision in the Indus Waters Kishenganga Arbitration (Pakistan v.…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Sea and Water, Territory

Public hearings in Argentina v Ghana: An UNCLOS dispute?

November 28, 2012 Naomi Burke

Under Article 290 of UNCLOS, ITLOS may prescribe provisional measures pending the constitution of an Article VII arbitral tribunal if“it…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Sea and Water, Territory

Passports or Public Recognition – The (lack of) Vietnamese and Indian recognition of Chinese territorial claims.

Cameron Miles

This blog post, however, does not seek to assess the respective merits of these claims – entire books can and…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Land, Territory

Argentina v Ghana at ITLOS

November 15, 2012 Naomi Burke

The Libertad is a 100-meter-long tall sailing ship, used as a training vessel by the Argentine navy. It was arrested…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Sea and Water, Territory

Nicaragua v Colombia at the ICJ: A Recap

November 14, 2012 Naomi Burke

History of Proceedings The proceedings were instituted by application of Nicaragua in December 2001. Nicaragua then submitted its Memorial in…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Land, Sea and Water, Territory

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The CILJ is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal with a broad focus on international and EU law. It is run by the postgraduate community of the Cambridge Faculty of Law.

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