Abstract

Abstract The Norwegian government has stated that creating a new international law of the sea is a foreign policy matter of the highest political priority in the period 1978–1981. A reasonable explanation might be the close correlation that normally exists between the political significance and the economic importance of issues and the area on which they impinge. As to Norway, it should suffice to point to the fact that the country ranks fifth among the merchant marine nations of the world, takes the fifth largest fish catch, and has sovereignty over the biggest continental shelf in Europe. Against this background, the author discusses the hypothesis that economic factors are the guiding hand in Norwegian ocean policy. However, the conclusion reached is that economic factors play a rather modest role in explaining this policy and that the reasons behind it are to be found at the intersection between economic interests, security policies, jurisdiction, the protection of resources and the environment as the...

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