Ecology Law Quarterly, Volume 16, Number 1 (1989)
Introduction
Preface: Japan, the United States, and Pacific Ocean Resources, by Harry N. Scheiber
Memorial to Sho Sato, by Ira Michael Heyman
Japan, the United States, and the Pacific Since 1945: An Overview, by Akio Watanabe
Historical Perspectives
Origins of the Abstention Doctrine in Ocean Law: Japanese-U.S. Relations and the Pacific Fisheries, 1937-1958, by Harry N. Scheiber
In the Realm of Diplomacy and Fish: Some Reflections on the International Convention on High Seas Fisheries in the North Pacific Ocean and the Law of the Sea Negotiations, by William C. Herrington
Polar Resources
Antarctic Resources and International Law: Japan, the United States, and the Future of Antarctica,
by Robert Friedheim and Tsuneo Akaha
Japan and the Antarctic Treaty System, by Christopher C. Joyner
Emergence of a New Pacific Regime
The Emergence of a Regional Ocean Regime in the South Pacific, Biliana Cicin-Sain and Robert Knecht
The United States and Japan in Relation to the Resources, the Environment, and the People of the Pacific Island Region, by Jon M. Van Dyke
National and International Perspectives
Approaches to the Resolution of Atlantic and Pacific Ocean Problems, by Donald M. McRae
Pacific Resources and Ocean Law: A Latin American Perspective, by Eduardo Ferrero Costa
The U.S.-Korean Fishing Rights Dispute in the North Pacific Ocean, by Choon-ho Park
Japanese Environmental Law and Ocean Resources, by Nobuo Kumamoto
The European Community and the Pacific, by Gunter Weiss
National Power and Ocean Resources
Fishing in the Bering Sea Donut: Straddling Stocks and the New International Law of Fisheries,
by William T. Burke
International Sanctions, Ocean Management, and the Law of the Sea: A Study of Denial of Access to Fisheries, by David D. Caron
Concluding Address
Pacific Ocean Resources: The New Regionalism and the Global System, by Stefan Riesenfeld