The British-Icelandic Fishing Disputes, 1952-1976

During the period 1948-1975, the Icelandic government enacted six laws to control fishing in its coastal waters. The first statute authorized the Minister of Fisheries to act by decree, and declared that Iceland would gain control over its entire continental shelf fisheries. With the other five laws...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Scholten, Gregory J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UNO 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/studentwork/2256
https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/context/studentwork/article/3261/viewcontent/EP73799.pdf
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Summary:During the period 1948-1975, the Icelandic government enacted six laws to control fishing in its coastal waters. The first statute authorized the Minister of Fisheries to act by decree, and declared that Iceland would gain control over its entire continental shelf fisheries. With the other five laws, either the Althing (Parliament) or the Minister extended Icelandic fisheries jurisdiction to distances of four, twelve, fifty, and two hundred miles. The nation acted with near impunity due to international turmoil over the precise definition of coastal limits where a state might exercise its maritime police powers. Many governments protested to Iceland over the extensions, but only the United Kingdom and the Federal Republic of Germany defied the declarations, and Germany only on the 50- and 200-mile claims. Although these quarrels with Germany were serious, even resulting in one man's death, Iceland's disputes with Britain were much worse.