Monitoring long-term environmental change: Some lessons from Sullom Voe, Shetland Islands William Ritchie OriginalPaper Pages: 193 - 204
A comparative analysis of the European and North-American approaches to dealing with major oil spills Marlene Calderon Veiga OriginalPaper Pages: 171 - 192
New technology and maritime training in the 21st century: Implications and solutions for MET institutions Peter M. P. Muirhead OriginalPaper Pages: 139 - 158
New security measures for the international shipping community Hartmut HesseNicolaos L. Charalambous OriginalPaper Pages: 123 - 138
The significance of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea for the shipping industry Thomas A. Mensah OriginalPaper Pages: 111 - 121
The place of the ISPS Code in the legal international regime Thomas A. Mensah OriginalPaper Pages: 17 - 30
Maritime English syllabus for the modern seafarer: Safety-related or comprehensive courses? Boris Pritchard OriginalPaper Pages: 149 - 166
Management and labour in shipping: A role for co-operatives Peter DavisLaszlo J. Kovats OriginalPaper Pages: 115 - 127
The problem of pure economic loss in the law relating to ship-source oil pollution damage Gotthard Mark Gauci OriginalPaper Pages: 79 - 88
Potential and benefits of AIS to Ships and Maritime Administrations Bernhard Berking OriginalPaper Pages: 61 - 78
Maritime accident investigation and temporal determinants of maritime accidents: A case study Detlef NielsenDietmar Jungnickel OriginalPaper Pages: 49 - 59
Measuring and sustaining the UK maritime skills base: A review Sean TarverMalek Pourzanjani OriginalPaper Pages: 5 - 15
The international regime of compensation for oil pollution damage and the policy of the International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds as to the admissibility of claims Måns Jacobsson OriginalPaper Pages: 59 - 69
Potential and benefits of electronic charts to Maritime Administrations Horst Hecht OriginalPaper Pages: 33 - 45