The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) is
one of the most important multilateral conventions in history. Adopted
in 1982, and effectively completed in 1994 with a revision of Part XI on
Deep Seabed Mining, the Convention is today in force for 160 nations
plus the European Union. In its 17 parts encompassing 320 articles
with nine annexes (and Final Act with six annexes) the Convention is
the authoritative contemporary basis for the law of the sea. Over a
quarter century in the making, the Convention has achieved a remarkable
breakthrough in oceans law ending the struggle lasting more than
four centuries between coastal nations seeking expanded control over
coastal resources and maritime powers seeking to protect navigational
freedom so essential for global trade and commerce. The answer
embodied in the Convention is a simple functional division of ocean
space, with coastal nations given jurisdiction over an extended 200
nautical mile exclusive economic zone for fisheries and other economic
interests while navigation remains a high seas freedom beyond
the territorial sea. In so doing the Convention has implemented the
community common interest on both issues and has achieved a true
win/win situation. Further, the Convention strengthens navigational
rights through modernization of the regime of innocent passage as
embodied in the 1958 Geneva Conventions and adopts an important
new regime of transit passage for international straits.