Dear Colleagues,
Shoreline boundaries for lakes and other water bodies are quite unusual but they do exist (i.e. national boundaries defined by ownership over the entire water body by one state, leaving the international boundary at the shoreline rather than the Thalweg or median delimitation as is usual). Examples in Africa (although contested in some quarters) may include Lake Nyasa/Malawi between Malawi and Tanzania and the Orange River between South Africa and Namibia. My questions then are -are there many other examples of shoreline boundaries (giving the entire river to one state) are out there? How many of these have been successfully challenged on the basis of being incompatible with the norm of median line delimitation? Is it fair to contest the 'fairness' of such shoreline delimitation mainly on the basis that there is a preponderance of median line solution in international practice?
Best Regards
Gbenga
Coming Soon: International Law and Boundary Disputes in Africa by Gbenga Oduntan Routledge -2014 -256 Series: Routledge Research in International Law http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415838924
JUST PUBLISHED: Sovereignty and Jurisdiction in Airspace and Outer Space
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415562126/
Dr. Gbenga Oduntan
Senior Lecturer -International Commercial Law
Convenor -LLM, International Commercial Law
Kent Law School,
Eliot College,
University of Kent,
Canterbury,
Kent CT2 7NS, UK.
Switchboard 0044 (0)1227 764000 (ext 4817)
Direct Line 0044 (0)1227 824817
Fax: 0044 (0) 1227 827831
Email: [log in to unmask]
http://www.kent.ac.uk/law/people/index.htm
|