Abstract

limitation problems arising from the presence of the small and barren Norwegian island of Jan Mayen less than 400 miles from Iceland and Greenland. The first part analyses the boundary settlement reached between Iceland and Norway, and suggests that it offers lessons for other areas, particularly in the mechanism for resolving boundary disputes, the treatment of islands and its indication that widening the context of a boundary settlement may assist in reaching agreement. The second part of the article describes the still unresolved boundary dispute between Greenland and Jan Mayen, and outlines a possible solution.

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