Thank you. I misspoke slightly. As a formal matter, there can be no general reservations to the Law of the Sea Convention. However, as regards the dispute settlement system under the Convention parties are expressly allowed to make a declaration that they do not accept dispute settlement in certain limited cases. Maritime boundaries is one example of an expressly permitted area where a party may declare they do not accept the application of the dispute settlement system. While I may have called this a reservation, it is simply an opt out provision that the treaty expressly provides for.
Oops, my mistake, Christina Marshall didn't leave that like and that comment. It was me. She works with me and must have logged into my computer last week, and accidentally clicked the "stay logged in" button on RUclips. Sorry. Marian
Thank you. I misspoke slightly. As a formal matter, there can be no general reservations to the Law of the Sea Convention. However, as regards the dispute settlement system under the Convention parties are expressly allowed to make a declaration that they do not accept dispute settlement in certain limited cases. Maritime boundaries is one example of an expressly permitted area where a party may declare they do not accept the application of the dispute settlement system. While I may have called this a reservation, it is simply an opt out provision that the treaty expressly provides for.
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Thank you either and both!
what is the difference among normal, straight and archipelagic baselines
Oops, my mistake, Christina Marshall didn't leave that like and that comment. It was me. She works with me and must have logged into my computer last week, and accidentally clicked the "stay logged in" button on RUclips. Sorry.
Marian
what is the difference among normal, straight and archipelagic baselines