Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on maps and measurements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Territory
- 1 Hans Island
- 2 Svalbard
- 3 Greenland
- 4 Sverdrup Islands
- 5 Summary
- 2 Maritime boundaries
- 1 1973 Canada–Denmark Boundary Treaty
- 2 1990 Bering Sea Treaty
- 3 Maritime boundaries around Jan Mayen
- 4 2006 Greenland–Svalbard Boundary Treaty
- 5 2010 Barents Sea Boundary Treaty
- 6 Lincoln Sea boundary
- 7 Summary
- 3 Beaufort Sea boundary
- 1 Background
- 2 Resolution efforts
- 3 Canada’s legal position
- 4 United States’ legal position
- 5 Law of maritime boundary delimitation within 200 nautical miles
- 6 Law of maritime boundary delimitation beyond 200 nautical miles
- 7 Potential negotiating positions
- 7.1 Unilateral recognition of the other state’s position
- 7.2 Coastal length
- 7.3 Relevance of islands
- 7.4 Concavity of the coastline
- 7.5 Canada’s position beyond the EEZ
- 7.6 Inuvialuit Final Agreement: a complicating factor
- 7.7 United States’ position beyond the EEZ
- 8 Options for United States–Canada cooperation
- 8.1 Canada makes a preliminary or partial submission to the Commission on the Limits of the Continen
- 8.2 United States sends a “no objection statement” to the Commission on the Limits of the Contin
- 8.3 Canada and United States maximize combined EEZ rights with a “special area”
- 8.4 Multifunctional delimitation
- 8.5 Provision of economic access rights
- 8.6 Joint development arrangement
- 9 Russia–Canada maritime boundary in the Beaufort Sea?
- 10 Summary
- 4 Extended continental shelves
- 1 Continental shelf regime
- 2 Seafloor highs
- 2.1 Oceanic ridges
- 2.2 Submarine ridges and submarine elevations
- 3 Geomorphological and geological characteristics of the central Arctic Ocean
- 3.1 Lomonosov Ridge
- 3.2 Alpha/Mendeleev Ridge
- 3.3 Submissions, responses, and diplomacy
- 4 Options for submissions to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf
- 4.1 Full submission without coordination with other states
- 4.2 Exclude any disputed or potentially disputed area from the submission
- 4.3 Agree not to object to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf considering data
- 4.4 Coordinated submissions
- 4.5 Joint submission
- 5 Negotiating temporary lines or permanent boundaries before submitting
- 5.1 Negotiate temporary lines in advance of Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf submis
- 5.2 Negotiate permanent boundaries in advance of Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf s
- 6 Options for maritime boundary delimitation
- 6.1 Delimitation of seafloor highs
- 6.2 Delimiting ridges with sector or distance formulae
- 6.3 Canada–Denmark boundary along the Lomonosov Ridge
- 6.4 Third-party dispute resolution
- 7 Non-Arctic states and Arctic continental shelves
- 8 Summary
- 5 Arctic Straits
- 1 Northwest Passage
- 1.1 Voyage of the SS Manhattan
- 1.2 Voyage of the USCGC Polar Sea
- 1.3 European Union and China
- 1.4 1988 Arctic Cooperation Agreement
- 1.5 Concerns about a precedent
- 2 Northern Sea Route
- 2.1 Vil’Kitskii incidents
- 2.2 Opening of the Northern Sea Route
- 3 Assessment of Canada’s and Russia’s legal positions
- 4 Canada–Russia cooperation
- 5 Canada–United States cooperation
- 6 Bering Strait
- 7 Unimak Pass
- 8 Nares Strait
- 9 Multilateral mechanisms available to “strait states”
- 10 Submarine voyages
- 11 Summary
- 6 Environmental protection
- 1 Species protection
- 1.1 Northern fur seals
- 1.2 Polar bears
- 1.3 Whales
- 2 Fisheries
- 2.1 Bering Sea “donut hole”
- 2.2 Arctic Ocean Fisheries Organization
- 3 Shipping
- 3.1 Ship safety
- 3.2 Ballast water
- 4 Nuclear accidents
- 5 Deep-sea mining
- 6 Air-borne pollution
- 6.1 Persistent organic pollutants
- 6.2 Arctic haze
- 6.3 Black carbon
- 7 Oil spills
- 7.1 United States
- 7.2 Canada
- 7.3 Norway
- 7.4 Greenland
- 7.5 Russia
- 7.6 Liability for oil spills
- 7.7 Agreement on oil spill preparedness and response
- 8 Ecosystem-based management
- 9 Summary
- 7 Indigenous peoples
- 1 Political participation and self-determination
- 2 Indigenous rights and state claims
- 3 Indigenous transnationalism and international law-making
- 4 Circumpolar Inuit Declaration on Sovereignty
- 5 Does sovereignty “begin at home”?
- 6 Seal product exports
- 7 Indigenous peoples and human rights
- 8 Indigenous peoples and whaling
- 9 Indigenous peoples and nuclear weapons
- 10 Summary
- 8 Security
- 1 De-escalating the Pole
- 2 China
- 3 Arctic nuclear-weapon-free zones
- 4 Non-state actors
- 4.1 Drug-smuggling
- 4.2 Illegal immigration
- 4.3 Trafficking of weapons of mass destruction
- 4.4 Terrorist attacks on aircraft
- 4.5 Protests against oil and gas infrastructure
- 5 Search and rescue
- 6 Summary
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index




