About MaReMa

Centre of Marine Resource Management was established in 2004 at the Norwegian College of Fishery Science, University of Tromsø.
The aim of the centre is to promote research in resource management both nationally and internationally.
Special emphasis is placed on interdisciplinary research and education.

MaReMa has its origins from the Norwegian College of Fishery Science which holds multidisciplinary research groups in the field of resource management. The groups work on topics as resource biology, population dynamics, harvesting technology, fisheries economics, bioeconomics, sociology and planning. Many of the members of MaReMa also have a long track record in interdisciplinary research. The centre has considerable international experience within the areas of resource management and project evaluation.

Read more on the MaReMa history here.

MaReMaCentre

Associate professor Peter Ørebech









Associate professor Peter Ørebech

Department of Social and Marketing Studies

Telephone: +47 77 64 55 51
Office 5.528
Email: petero@nfh.uit.no

Home > Members > Peter Ørebech

Research

Fisheries law, EU-law, the Law of the Sea, Administrative law, Property law with a special emphasis on public property rights.

Teaching areas

Fisheries law, fish farming law, the law of the sea, EU law and International law and food safety

Selected publications

The European Economic Area and Fisheries (The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law 1993 s. 453-469 – co-author Robin Churchill).

The Northern Sea Route. Conditions for sailing according to European Community legislation with a special emphasis on Port State jurisdiction (Frithjof Nansen Institute, 1995 - 67 pp). (A short version published in European Transport Law, Journal of Law and Economics 1996)

The Northern Sea Route. Conditions for participation according to WTO legislation - with a special emphasis on the non-discriminatory treatment principles of Most-Favored-Nation- and National Treatment Clauses under the General Agreement on Trade in Services (Frithjof Nansen Institute, 1996 - 96 pp.).

Public, Common or Private Property Rights: Legal and Political aspects in Arnfred & Petersen (eds.): Legal Change in North/South Perspective (Roskilde University, Denmark 1996) p. 45-66.

1995 United Nations Straddling and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks Agreement: Management, Enforcement and Dispute Settlement (The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law 1998 s.119-141 – co-author Ted L. McDorman and Ketill Sigurjonsson).

The EU Competency Confusion: Limits, “Extension Mechanisms,” Split Power, Subsidiarity, and “Institutional Clashes” (Journal of Transnational Law and Policy, The Florida State University College of Law vol. 13, 2003, p. 99-151)

The Fisheries Issues of the 2004 Second European Union Accession Treaty: a comparison with the 1994 First Accession Treaty (Int’journal of Marine & Costal law vol. 19, 2004 p. 93-142)

What Restoration Schemes Can Do? Or. Getting It Right Without Fisheries Transferable Quotas (Ocean Development & International Law (36) 2005, 159-178)
The Role of Customary Law in Sustainable Development - 502 pp. (Cambridge University Press, 2005, co-author Fred Bosselman et al.)

International Trade in Shipping Services: Comity-balancing the Conflicts of Jurisdiction – as illustrated by the EU Shipping and Safe Seas Provisions (330 pp, accepted for peer review Oxford University Press, December 2006)

The possessions’ protection under the 1950 European Human Rights Convention, First Additional Protocol Article 1 (Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights, accepted for peer review, September 2006)