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Vessel Traffic Services and The New Law of the Sea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1985

E. Gold
Affiliation:
(Dalhousie University, Canada)

Extract

In the history of navigation, the subject of Vessel Traffic Services (VTS) is a comparative newcomer. Nevertheless, it has and is generating interest, controversy and discussion analogous almost with the change from sail to steam or the advent of radar at sea. Interestingly though, much of the VTS debate has taken place within the industry itself—i.e. amongst the nautical professions, shipping companies and governmental marine regulatory agencies. This has resulted in a deservedly strong technical emphasis on the subject which, after all, is primarily concerned with marine safety. Legal questions have so far been sidelined or reduced to background interest. Legal problems relating to accident liability have been rarely discussed and when they were, have often been distorted.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1985

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References

REFERENCES

1 See, for example, Wepster, A., 'Advancement of transport through the organization of the movement of ships', in Vessel Traffic Services (ed. G. Zade), vol. t, Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Vessel Traffic Services, 1981.Google Scholar
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