People who purchased "Places of Refuge by Eric Van Hooydonk" also purchased...
Reviews of Places of Refuge by Eric Van Hooydonk
A 'magnificent and timely' work...      Reviewed by Anonymous, 06/09/2010 If you're professionally involved in the world of shipping, transport and maritime law, whether practitioner, student or academic, you need this invaluable work of reference from Lloyd's List. It addresses one of the thorniest and most topical issues pertaining to worldwide shipping: the problem of what to do about and where to put a vessel floundering in distress off a coastline. Certainly this is a matter that has confounded national and city states since the early days of sail.
Significantly in the opening pages, the author quotes Pliny the Younger (who [we believe] chronicled the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 71!) who applauds the construction of a port on the Italian coast(now Citta Vechia) as a safe haven that would save countless lives. Just goes to show how long, and longer, the problem has been with us and which, almost two millennia later has acquired new and often horrifying dimensions, due to security issues and the risk of environmental pollution.
So, in just under 500 pages, the book presents a detailed analysis of the CMI draft Instrument in all its aspects. At the same time it examines developments within the IMO and European States, together with a review of current international law and a summary of leading papers and commentaries on this topic written over the last twenty years.
The scholarship involved is precise and formidable and in this copiously footnoted work, you'll find the expected and useful research tools, including extensive tables of international instruments, EU legislation and general legislation, as well as Tables of Cases and an extensive bibliography. As is pointed out in the foreword, this is an invaluable source of information and knowledge, not only about the CMI Draft Instrument, but about the enormous international legal source material that exists, but which so far has been very difficult to access, as compelling a reason as any to rush out and purchase this book.
Review this book |