State Responsibility for Injurious consequences by Acts not Prohibited by International Law in Transboundary Pollution of the Marine Environment
The 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea and related treaties have significantly developed the rules of international law applicable to the preservation of the marine environment and illustrate the evolution of state responsibility. A State will also assume liability when it engages in acts not prohibited by international law, but it is different from State Liability arising out of acts not prohibited by international law in transboundary pollution of the marine environment, including the conception and features, the inscapes, the principle of imputation, and the exeption of liability.
State Responsibility transboundary pollution of the marine environment acts not prohibited by international law
Zhou Qinghua Liang Na
Dalian Maritime University School of Law
国际会议
Intl Conference on Marine Pollution Liability & Policy(国际海洋油污会议--海洋污染责任与政策国际研讨会)
大连
英文
828-836
2009-06-04(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)