ABSTRACT

This book is the first of its kind to explore the problems inherent in the unification of maritime law. Featuring contributions from leading experts at European maritime law research centres, it considers international conventions, current maritime practice, standard forms and recently adopted or drafted national codifications of maritime law from the codification point of view.

The book is divided into four parts which represent different views on the main topic. Part I gathers chapters dedicated to different aspects and methods of unification of maritime law on a global scale, as well as several specific issues of maritime law from the regulatory point of view. Part II of the book consists of those papers that centre around the issue of transport of goods. Part III is dedicated to codifications of carriage of passengers, cruise law and leisure navigation. Finally, Part IV addresses national codifications of maritime law.

Codification of Maritime Law: Challenges, Possibilities and Experience seeks to provide common ground for future unification of maritime law, which makes the book useful both for private and public maritime lawyers and states’ maritime administrations worldwide.

part I|101 pages

General Remarks

chapter Chapter 1|7 pages

Codification

Problems of differing legal cultures

chapter Chapter 2|7 pages

Unification and codification of maritime law

Friends or foes?

chapter Chapter 6|23 pages

Successes and failures of uniform maritime law instruments

Is there room for a new approach?

chapter Chapter 7|7 pages

The gap between EU and EEA law

Opportunities and threats of EEA consolidation

chapter Chapter 8|15 pages

The Maritime Labour Convention

A Code of minimum rights and maximum impact

part II|66 pages

Codification Issues in Transport of Goods by Sea

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

The Rotterdam Rules and international trade

Accord or discord?

part IV|40 pages

National Codifications of Maritime Law

chapter Chapter 17|15 pages

Maritime law codification in Japan

Elements considered and those not considered

chapter Chapter 18|14 pages

Codification of maritime law

The experience of Spain 1

chapter Chapter 19|9 pages

Recent national maritime law codifications — reasons and scope

The Polish perspective as compared with other selected jurisdictions