Abstract
The legal limbo that defines the maritime space over which is applied the process of delimitation of the outer continental shelf appears today as an eminently practical question that needs to be addressed. The institutional framework provided by UNCLOS, which establishes the existence of an internationalized space on the seabed - the area - seems limited to respond to a debate that confuses Geology with Law. This article focuses on the powers of the International Seabed Authority as an agency authorized to act on behalf of Mankind by exploring its weaknesses in its exercise of this mandate in the context of that process. By analyzing the conflict between the expansionist goals of States and the embodied principle that gives the Authority the assignment to act on behalf of Mankind in securing a space that, according to the text of the Convention, belongs to it, we conclude that there are apparent inconsistencies in the institutional framework created the Montego Bay Convention. In our exegesis of Part XI of the Convention, we work on the cogent force of that principle and raise questions about the legal legitimacy of the entire process, i.e. in the absence of a clear statement by the above mentioned Authority. We conclude that the text of the Convention provides the possibility of a direct intervention by the Authority but that there are still no political conditions for such a possibility to be realized.
Translated title of the contribution | The Authority of Mankind : An Analysis to the Institutional Protection of the Geographical Stronghold of the Common Heritage of Mankind in the Legal-Political Context of the Phenomenon of the Continental Shelf Enlargement Beyond 200 Nautical Miles |
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Original language | Portuguese |
Journal | Instituto Jurídico da Faculdade de Direito da Universidade de Coimbra: Estudos de Doutoramento & Mestrado |
Number of pages | 55 |
Publication status | Published - Jan 2014 |
Externally published | Yes |