Now in its third edition, this authoritative guide covers all of the core aspects of maritime law in one distinct volume. Maritime Law is written by a team of leading academics and practitioners, each expert in their own field. Together, they provide clear, concise and fully up-to-date coverage of topics ranging from bills of lading to arrest of ships, all written in an accessible and engaging style. As English law is heavily relied on throughout the maritime world, this book is grounded in English law whilst continuing to analyse the key international conventions currently in force.
Brand new coverage includes:
- Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 December 2012 on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (recast)
- The coming into force of the 2006 Maritime Labour Convention and the Merchant Shipping Regulations 2014
- The approval of the 2012 edition of the Norwegian Sale Form
- Regulation 100/2013 heavily amending Regulation 1406/2002 establishing the European Maritime Safety Agency
- Greater detail on piracy in the Public International Law chapter and discussion of the M/V Louisa, ARA Libertad and Arctic Sunrise cases in the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
- Expanded sections in the marine insurance chapter
- Analysis of recent cases including Golden Ocean Group Ltd v Salgaocar Mining Industries PVT Ltd; Starlight Shipping Co v Allianz Marine & Aviation Versicherungs AG and Griffon Shipping Ltd. v Firodi Shipping Ltd.
This book is a comprehensive reference source for students, academics, and legal practitioners worldwide, especially those new to maritime law or a particular field therein.
About the Author: PROFESSOR YVONNE BAATZ (MA Oxon.) qualified as a solicitor in 1981. She practised with two leading firms of solicitors in the City of London, specialising in shipping litigation. Since 1991 she has been a lecturer in the Law School at the University of Southampton and was made a professor in 2007. She was Director of the Institute of Maritime Law from 2003 to 2006.
AINHOA CAMPAS VELASCO (LLB Hons Degree (Spain), LLM (Soton)). Member of the Bar Association of Madrid, she practised with two leading Maritime Law firms in Madrid. She was a part time lecturer in the Law School at the University of Southampton.
CHARLES DEBATTISTA practises from Stone Chambers in Gray's Inn, representing parties as counsel and sitting as an arbitrator in shipping and international trade disputes; he also has a thriving advisory practice and is a CEDR-accredited mediator. The Legal 500 for 2014 describes him as "very thorough and efficient ... good manner with clients....inspires confidence." Charles arbitrates and appears as counsel in LMAA, ICC, LCIA, and ad hoc arbitration; he is also on the Panels of the Singapore Chamber for Maritime Arbitration and of the Geneva Trading and Shipping Association. Charles is a Member of the Baltic Exchange, of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators, a supporting member of the LMAA, and an Individual Member of GAFTA and of FOSFA. He has had many of his arbitration awards confirmed in the courts and his publications have been frequently cited in judgments in this country and abroad. Until 2011, he was Professor of Commercial Law at the University of Southampton, where he was twice Director of the Institute of Maritime Law. He chaired the Drafting Group for Incoterms 2000 and 2010 and participated in the drafting of many other international trade instruments published by the ICC. Charles can be contacted at Charles.debattista@stonechambers.com
ÖZLEM GÜRSES, is a Senior Lecturer in Maritime Law in the Law School at the University of Southampton. She previously worked at the University of East Anglia as a Lecturer in Commercial Law. Ozlem completed her PhD in Reinsurance Law and teaches Insurance, Marine Insurance and Reinsurance.
JOHANNA HJALMARSSON (JUR KAND Stockholm 1995, LLM Soton 2004) joined the Institute of Maritime Law in 2004, having served as a junior judge in Sweden, a legal advisor with the UN in Vienna and a deputy head of unit with the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia Herzegovina.
ANDREA LISTA (DOTT. GIUR. LLD (Italy), LLM (Soton) Practising Advocate (Italy), is a Senior Lecturer in Commercial Law at the University of Southampton and an active legal consultant and writer in various areas of international commercial law. In the past he has notably worked as a legal adviser to a multinational enterprise leading in underwater technology, and has been a consultant to the European Parliament.
FILIPPO LORENZON (LLD (Italy), LLM Soton, FCIL, Avvocato (Italy) and solicitor in England and Wales (n.p.) is a Senior Lecturer in Maritime and Commercial Law at the School of Law at the University of Southampton. He is fully qualified as an Avvocato in Italy and as a Solicitor in England and Wales (n.p.) and is a Member of the Italian and British Maritime Law Associations, the European Maritime Law Association (EMLO) and the International Bar Association (IBA). He works with leading maritime and commercial law firms in London, Genoa and Venice.
CAPTAIN RICHARD PILLEY, after a career at sea, joined Thos Miller & Co, managers of the UK P&I Club, in 1982, where he became a claims syndicate manager and later set up the UK Club ship inspection programme. He is now a senior research fellow at the University of Southampton and is a Younger Brother of Trinity House.
ANDREW SERDY lectures at the School of Law in public international law and the international law of the sea, in which he previously practised for 1995 to 2005 for the Australian Government. Since 2004 he has also been a visiting fellow in the Faculty of Law at the University of Wollongong (NSW).
RICHARD SHAW practised as a solicitor specialising in Maritime Law in the City of London for 15 years, before he founded in 1980 the firm of Shaw and Croft, from which he retired in 1995. He was a Senior Research Fellow in the Institute of Maritime Law at the University of Southampton and titular member of the Comite Maritime International. He attended the meetings of the IMO Legal Committee and International Oil Pollution Fund as CMI observer delegate. Richard died in 2013.
PROFESSOR MICHAEL TSIMPLIS is the current Director of the Institute of Maritime Law. He is a senior lecturer in law and ocean sciences, jointly appointed by the School of Law and the National Oceanography Centre. He is a contributing author to the fourth IPCC report and participates in the activities of various national and international scientific bodies.