When international rules and regulations governing space travel were first being developed, only a few countries had any space presence and commercial space activity was non-existent. Today, over 50 countries have on-orbit satellites and commercial space presence is essential to commercial telecommu
Flagging Standards: Globalization and Environmental, Safety, and Labor Regulations at Sea
β Scribed by Elizabeth R. DeSombre
- Publisher
- The MIT Press
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 321
- Edition
- illustrated edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Shipping is among the most globalized of industries. Ship owners can choose where to register their vessels, based on cost, convenience, and the international and domestic regulations that would govern their operation. This system of open registration, also known as flags of convenience (FOC), can encourage a competition in regulatory laxity among states that want to attract shipping revenuesβa race to the regulatory bottom. In Flagging Standards , Elizabeth DeSombre examines the effect of globalization on environmental, safety, and labor standards in the shipping industry. She finds that the economic advantages of lowered standards can be offset by the collective action of international organizations, states, and non-governmental actors to exclude low-standard ships from the advantages of globalization. Open registries are pressured to raise their standards while traditional maritime states lower theirs somewhat when they create international or second registries. The result is a competition not for the regulatory bottom but for the middle ground. DeSombre examines the decisions made by states and ship owners that lead to this race to the middle and explores the effectiveness of strategies used by both state and nonstate actors aimed at raising regulatory standards, including port control, labor actions against FOC ships that fail to meet international labor standards, and trade restrictions against shipped goods that were not obtained within the requirements of international agreements. Globalization, DeSombre finds, may lead to a downward trend in regulatory standards but has also created many opportunities to raise these standards and does not necessarily signal a reduction of state control.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 10
1 Introduction: International Standards at Sea......Page 14
2 Globalization, Competition, and Convergence: Racing to the Middle?......Page 24
3 Exclusion as Incentive: The Power of Clubs......Page 68
4 Ships and States: The Evolution of Flags of Convenience......Page 82
5 Port State Control......Page 100
6 The International Transport Workers Federation and Labor Standards......Page 148
7 Regional Fisheries Management Organizations and Trade Restrictions......Page 164
8 Industry Self-Governance......Page 194
9 Ships, States, and Sovereignty......Page 212
Appendixes......Page 244
APPENDIX A......Page 245
APPENDIX B......Page 269
APPENDIX C......Page 273
APPENDIX D......Page 277
APPENDIX E......Page 285
APPENDIX F......Page 286
References......Page 288
Index......Page 312
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