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Maritime Autonomous Vehicles and International Law: Maritime Security Perspectives

Edited by: Natalie Klein, Douglas Guilfoyle, Md Saiful Karim, Rob McLaughlin

ISBN13: 9781032675596
To be Published: January 2025
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £145.00



Maritime Autonomous Vehicles (MAVs) have the potential to radically alter all uses of maritime space, with technology progressing faster than the law. This book explores the current international legal framework and the options available to regulate maritime security in the face of emerging technologies.

MAVs are starting to play a role not only in policing and military security, but also for the perpetration of maritime crimes. Through discussing the existing international legal framework for combating maritime security threats, the book will consider the use of MAVs by states for various security purposes, and the potential dangers of MAVs in the hands of non-state actors. As the intersection of maritime technology with international maritime security law is crucial to a safe future for all, this timely book makes essential suggestions to adapt existing legal frameworks to match emerging technologies. Addressing critical questions such as who exercises jurisdiction when ships are remotely controlled, how jamming technology may be lawfully deployed and what force may be permissible during maritime law enforcement, this book identifies a diversity of current legal gaps and problems, and makes suggestions as to how to rectify them.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars in the field of the law of the sea, maritime security and in emerging technologies.

Subjects:
Shipping, Transport and Maritime Law, Public International Law
Contents:
Part I: Overarching Issues
1. Maritime Autonomous Vehicles: Challenges and Opportunities under International Law
Natalie Klein
2. Integrating Maritime Autonomous Vehicles into National Maritime Security Architecture
Douglas Guilfoyle
3. MASS, UNCLOS and the Flag State
Henrik Ringbom

Part II: Military Concerns, Military Activities and Navigational Rights
4. Sovereign Immunity of Unmanned Maritime Vehicles
James Kraska
5. Maritime Drones at War: Legal Issues Affecting Characterization and Use
David Letts and Raul (Pete) Pedrozo
6. The Future of Ocean Technology and Navigational Rights in the International Law of the Sea
Simon McKenzie
7. Some Rules Applicable to Use of Long Range Underwater Maritime Autonomous Vehicles for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Purposes
Rob McLaughlin
8. The Legality of Electromagnetic Interference with Maritime Autonomous Vehicles
Tracy L Reynolds and Hitoshi Nasu

Part III: Responding to Illegal Activities at Sea
9. Maritime Law Enforcement in the Era of Autonomous Ships: Use of Force and Safeguards
Md Saiful Karim and Alexander Proelss
10. Piracy and Maritime Terrorism Involving Autonomous Ships
Md Saiful Karim and Douglas Guilfoyle
11. Legal Implications for Maritime Autonomous Vehicles in Relation to Stowaways
Sianne Tsandidis
12. The Use of Maritime Autonomous Vehicles in Fisheries Law Enforcement
Natalie Klein

Part IV: MAVs and New Frontiers in International Maritime Security Law
13. Environmental and Maritime Security, Civil Liability Regimes, and Maritime Autonomous Vehicles
Yurika Ishii
14. Maritime Autonomous Vehicles in Polar Waters: Opportunities, Risks and Governance Implications
Sofia Galani