Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- List of Antarctic Treaty Parties
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Frontispiece: Map of national claims
- Part I Antarctica: physical environment and scientific research
- Part II The Antarctic Treaty regime: legal issues
- 4 Introduction
- 5 The Antarctic scene: legal and political facts
- 6 The Antarctic Treaty system: a viable alternative for the regulation of resource-oriented activities
- 7 The relevance of Antarctica to the lawyer
- 8 The Antarctic Treaty system: some jurisdictional problems
- Part III The Antarctic Treaty regime: protecting the marine environment
- Part IV The Antarctic Treaty regime: minerals regulation
- Part V Whither Antarctica? Future policies
- Part VI Conclusion
- Selected reading
- Appendix 1
- Appendix 2
7 - The relevance of Antarctica to the lawyer
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- List of Antarctic Treaty Parties
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Frontispiece: Map of national claims
- Part I Antarctica: physical environment and scientific research
- Part II The Antarctic Treaty regime: legal issues
- 4 Introduction
- 5 The Antarctic scene: legal and political facts
- 6 The Antarctic Treaty system: a viable alternative for the regulation of resource-oriented activities
- 7 The relevance of Antarctica to the lawyer
- 8 The Antarctic Treaty system: some jurisdictional problems
- Part III The Antarctic Treaty regime: protecting the marine environment
- Part IV The Antarctic Treaty regime: minerals regulation
- Part V Whither Antarctica? Future policies
- Part VI Conclusion
- Selected reading
- Appendix 1
- Appendix 2
Summary
Antarctica is unique in its isolated location (990 km from the southern tip of South America), size (one-tenth of the surface of the globe), permanent ice-cap (covering 98% of the continent) with consequent extremes of climate, and absence of permanent human habitation. Do such unique characteristics, stressed by the explorers and scientists who know the region, make law unnecessary? Regulation is required where a people grows in number beyond family and tribal constraint and exchange and communication with other groups of people take place. With the few thousand scientists at present in Antarctica and their logistic support, provided in part by personnel of the armed forces – both disciplined groups under their home state laws – there is at the present time, apart from some conservation and communication measures, little need for the apparatus of legislation, courts and law enforcement as it exists in the modern state.
What relevance, then, has Antarctica for the lawyer? Probably little, at the present time, for the practitioner in one particular national system. Material for the comparative lawyer and private international lawyer is equally scanty.
But, if the absence of an indigenous population dispenses with the need for laws to preserve internal order, the size of Antarctica and its untapped resources in an international community increasingly aware of its finite limits, has produced a conflict of interests between states. The reconciliation and regulation of such conflict of interests falls squarely in the field of the public international lawyer. Antarctica, therefore, and the legal issues which it has presented, ever since its explorers received state backing, is of direct relevance to the international lawyer.
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- Information
- The Antarctic Treaty RegimeLaw, Environment and Resources, pp. 77 - 87Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1987
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