ABSTRACT

This book examines the historical and contextual background to the oil and gas resources in the Kurdish territories, placing particular emphasis on the reserves situated in the disputed provinces. The volume is singularly unique in focusing on an examination of the rules reflected in both the national and the regional constitutional, legislative, and contractual measures and documents relevant to the question of whether the central government in Baghdad or the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) in Erbil has a stronger claim to legal control over the oil and gas resources in the disputed Kurdish territories. As a subsidiary focus, the author also draws attention to how the basic thrust of the volume connects to broader jurisprudential issues regarding the nature and purpose of law, the matter of claims by native peoples to natural resources on traditional lands, and the place of regional minorities operating in a federal system. Since the law examined is domestic or municipal in origin, additional reference is made to the role that such law can play in the "bottom up" (as opposed to more conventional "top down") development of international law.

The book’s opening chapters provide a valuable contextual introduction, followed by a number of substantive chapters providing an analytical and critical assessment of the controlling legal rules. Written in a scholarly, yet accessible style, and covering matters of basic importance to academics, lawyers, political scientists, government representatives, and students of energy and natural resources, as well as those of developing legal structures, Oil and Gas in the Disputed Kurdish Territories is an essential addition to any collection.

part I|48 pages

Contextual background of oil and gas in disputed Kurdish territories

part II|107 pages

Federal constitutional allotment of oil and gas authority

chapter 3|36 pages

Articles 110–112, and 114–115 of Iraq's Constitution (2005)

The respective powers of the central versus the Kurdish government when it comes to oil and gas

chapter 5|39 pages

The matter of disputed territories

Articles 53 and 58 of the TAL, and articles 140 and 143 of the Iraq Constitution (2005)

part III|62 pages

How the Kurdish Constitution and relevant federal and regional legislation address oil and gas in disputed territories

part IV|54 pages

Disputed territories, the terms of the KRG's model and negotiated PSCs, and observations regarding federalism

chapter IV|15 pages

Epilogue

Largely of bottom-up development in international law