Sovereignty and international law in maritime disputes: a critical analysis of the Philippines v. China arbitration in the South China Sea

De Santis, Antonio (A.A. 2023/2024) Sovereignty and international law in maritime disputes: a critical analysis of the Philippines v. China arbitration in the South China Sea. Tesi di Laurea in International law, Luiss Guido Carli, relatore Pierfrancesco Rossi, pp. 62. [Bachelor's Degree Thesis]

[img]
Preview
PDF (Full text)
Download (5MB) | Preview

Abstract/Index

Analysis of the South China Sea. Geography of the South China Sea. Historical importance. South China Sea disputes in recent times. PRC claims over the South China Sea. The Philippines’ roles. The South China Sea conundrum. The Republic of the Philippines v. People’s Republic of China. Analysis of the Republic of the Philippines v. People’s Republic of China case. Philippines’ pursuit of dispute resolution despite China’s non-participation. Preconditions, exceptions and limitations to the jurisdiction of the tribunal. The status of features in the South China Sea. The tribunal’s role. The South China Sea arbitration aftermath. Critical analysis of jurisdiction and the merits of the decision in the Philippines vs. China case. Analysis of the jurisdictional decision in the Philippines vs. China case. Perspectives of experts and scholars on the jurisdictional verdict. Analysis of the criteria used by the tribunal to determine the status of formations. Analysis of the tribunal’s approach to environmental protection. Implications of the Philippines v. China arbitration.

References

Bibliografia: pp. 60-62.

Thesis Type: Bachelor's Degree Thesis
Institution: Luiss Guido Carli
Degree Program: Bachelor's Degree Programs > Bachelor's Degree Program in Politics: Philosophy and Economics (L-36)
Chair: International law
Thesis Supervisor: Rossi, Pierfrancesco
Academic Year: 2023/2024
Session: Autumn
Deposited by: Alessandro Perfetti
Date Deposited: 27 Mar 2025 16:17
Last Modified: 27 Mar 2025 16:17
URI: https://tesi.luiss.it/id/eprint/41397

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Repository Staff Only

View Item View Item