Archipelagic state
An archipelagic state is a sovereign entity constituted wholly by one or more archipelagos, potentially including additional islands, as defined under Article 46 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).[1] This legal status permits such states to establish archipelagic baselines connecting the outermost points of their islands, thereby enclosing internal waters known as archipelagic waters over which the state exercises full sovereignty, including the airspace above and the seabed below, while granting foreign vessels rights of innocent passage and archipelagic sea lanes passage.[1] The framework, codified in Part IV of UNCLOS adopted in 1982, addresses the unique geographical challenges of island groups by treating interconnecting waters as integral to national territory rather than international high seas, thereby enhancing territorial cohesion and resource control for these states.[2] Prominent examples include Indonesia, the Philippines, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and the Bahamas, which were the first to gain recognition under UNCLOS for their archipelagic configurations.[3] Additional states asserting this status encompass Antigua and Barbuda, Cape Verde, Comoros, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, the Maldives, Mauritius, São Tomé and Príncipe, Seychelles, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu, totaling around twenty claimants, though eligibility requires the state's territory to consist entirely of archipelagos without a continental mainland.[3] This designation has proven critical for nations spanning thousands of islands, such as Indonesia with over 17,000, enabling unified governance over vast maritime domains that would otherwise fragment sovereignty.[3] Key characteristics include the obligation to allow continuous, expeditious passage through designated sea lanes for foreign ships and aircraft, balancing national security with international navigation freedoms, while prohibiting suspension of innocent passage unlike in purely internal waters.[1] Controversies arise in implementation, particularly where baselines enclose excessive waters or conflict with neighboring states' exclusive economic zones, as seen in disputes involving Indonesia's expansive claims or the Philippines' assertions in the South China Sea, underscoring tensions between archipelagic entitlements and broader maritime law principles.[3] Despite these challenges, the regime has bolstered the viability of small island developing states by securing control over fisheries, hydrocarbons, and strategic routes within their archipelagos.[4]Legal Framework
Definition and Criteria under UNCLOS
Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), an archipelagic state is defined in Article 46(a) as "a State constituted wholly by one or more archipelagos and may include other islands."[2] An archipelago, per Article 46(b), consists of "a group of islands, including parts of islands, interconnecting waters within the baselines drawn in accordance with article 47 and other natural features which are closely interrelated historically, culturally, or economically."[2] This definition emphasizes geographic unity through chains or clusters of islands separated by waters, distinguishing archipelagic states from continental coastal states or mere island nations lacking sufficient internal connectivity.[2] To qualify as an archipelagic state and draw archipelagic baselines, the state must satisfy specific criteria outlined in Article 47.[2] Baselines connect the outermost points of the outermost islands and drying reefs, enclosing the main islands of the archipelago, with the water-to-land area ratio—including main islands and atolls—ranging from 1:1 to 9:1.[2] Individual baseline segments generally cannot exceed 100 nautical miles in length, though up to 3 percent of the total number may extend to 125 nautical miles.[2] Additional requirements ensure baselines align with the archipelago's configuration without undue deviation.[2] They must enclose principal islands and internal waters or sea lanes as feasibly as possible, following the archipelago's overall shape.[2] Baselines cannot originate from or connect low-tide elevations unless permanently marked by lighthouses or similar above-sea-level installations, or if situated entirely within the territorial sea of nearby land or another such elevation.[2] The system must not sever another state's territorial sea from the high seas or exclusive economic zone.[2] Archipelagic states are required to publish these baselines on charts with due publicity, including any qualifying low-tide elevations.[2] These provisions, adopted in the 1982 UNCLOS treaty effective from November 16, 1994, formalize the legal basis for claiming sovereignty over enclosed archipelagic waters while balancing navigational interests.[2] Only states meeting these empirical geographic and procedural thresholds—verified through baseline submissions to the UN Secretary-General—attain archipelagic status under international law.[5]Archipelagic Baselines
Archipelagic baselines, as defined in Article 47 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), allow an archipelagic state to draw straight lines joining the outermost points of its outermost islands and drying reefs, thereby enclosing bodies of water as archipelagic waters subject to its sovereignty.[2] These baselines must encompass the main islands of the archipelago to the extent of the state's jurisdiction and ensure connectivity among its constituent parts, distinguishing them from normal baselines used by continental coastal states.[2] Unlike straight baselines under Article 7, which are exceptional for deeply indented coastlines or fringing islands, archipelagic baselines are a standard regime for qualifying states, provided they meet specific geographic criteria including a water-to-land area ratio between 1:1 and 9:1.[2][6] The drawing of these baselines is subject to strict limitations to prevent excessive enclosure of high seas or exclusive economic zones. Each baseline segment generally cannot exceed 100 nautical miles in length, though up to 3 percent of the total segments enclosing an archipelago may extend to 125 nautical miles; baselines must not deviate appreciably from the archipelago's general configuration and cannot connect to low-tide elevations unless permanently above-sea-level installations like lighthouses exist thereon.[2][1] These rules aim to balance the archipelagic state's unity with navigational interests, as verified in state practice such as Indonesia's system of 192 segments (160 archipelagic), where five exceed 100 nautical miles within the allowable limit.[7] The Philippines, another early adopter, formalized its baselines domestically in 1961 and aligned them with UNCLOS post-ratification, enclosing over 7,000 islands while adhering to the ratio and length constraints.[8] Once established and deposited with the UN Secretary-General, these baselines serve as the reference for measuring the state's territorial sea, contiguous zone, exclusive economic zone, and continental shelf outward, while the enclosed waters gain internal status with rights of innocent and sea lanes passage.[2] Non-compliance with Article 47 criteria can lead to disputes, as seen in analyses questioning baseline configurations that enclose disproportionate ocean areas, though UNCLOS lacks a formal deposit review mechanism beyond mandatory charts or lists.[4] Archipelagic baselines thus formalize the geographic integrity of states like Fiji and the Bahamas, where single or grouped archipelagos fit the criteria without encompassing extraneous territories.[9]Sovereignty and Resource Rights in Archipelagic Waters
Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), Article 49 establishes that the sovereignty of an archipelagic state extends to the archipelagic waters enclosed by baselines drawn in accordance with Article 47, irrespective of depth or distance from the coast, as well as to the airspace above these waters and their bed and subsoil.[2] This sovereignty is qualified by the navigational regimes outlined in Parts III (innocent passage) and IV (archipelagic sea lanes passage) of UNCLOS, distinguishing archipelagic waters from fully internal waters where no right of passage exists.[2] Unlike the exclusive economic zone (EEZ), where coastal states hold only sovereign rights for resources, archipelagic waters confer comprehensive sovereignty akin to territorial seas, enabling regulation of all activities subject to treaty-specified exceptions.[10] Sovereign rights over resources in archipelagic waters encompass the exploration, exploitation, conservation, and management of both living (e.g., fisheries) and non-living (e.g., hydrocarbons, minerals) resources, extending to the seabed and subsoil.[11] Archipelagic states may enact laws governing fishing, marine scientific research, and environmental protection within these waters, provided they do not impede recognized passage rights or existing submarine cables.[12] Foreign vessels exercising innocent or sea lanes passage are prohibited from engaging in resource extraction, such as fishing or seabed mining, reinforcing the archipelagic state's control during transit.[2] Article 51 mandates respect for traditional fishing rights and access privileges of immediate neighboring states, as well as pre-existing agreements, limiting absolute resource exclusivity in practice.[2] In application, Indonesia, recognized as an archipelagic state since UNCLOS ratification on February 3, 1986, asserts sovereignty over approximately 3 million square kilometers of waters interconnecting its 17,508 islands, including exclusive management of fisheries yielding over 6 million tons annually and hydrocarbon exploration in areas like the Natuna Sea.[13] The Philippines, another original archipelagic claimant under UNCLOS, enforces resource rights through domestic legislation such as Republic Act No. 8550, regulating aquaculture and fisheries in its archipelagic waters encompassing over 7,000 islands, while balancing obligations to traditional users from neighboring states.[11] These exercises of sovereignty have occasionally led to disputes, such as Indonesia's patrols against illegal fishing, underscoring the tension between resource control and international navigation freedoms, though UNCLOS prioritizes empirical enforcement over expansive claims.[14]Passage and Navigation Rights
Innocent Passage Regime
The right of innocent passage through archipelagic waters is codified in Article 52 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), granting ships of all states this privilege in accordance with the rules applicable to territorial seas under Part II, Section 3 (Articles 17–26).[2] This regime ensures continuous and expeditious passage that remains non-prejudicial to the peace, good order, or security of the archipelagic state, while allowing the coastal state to regulate such navigation for specified purposes.[15] Unlike the broader archipelagic sea lanes passage (ASLP) under Article 53, which permits unimpeded transit in designated routes including submerged submarine operations and aircraft overflight, innocent passage applies primarily to routes outside designated sea lanes and imposes stricter conformity to coastal state rules.[1][3] Innocent passage requires vessels to proceed without delay through archipelagic waters, adhering to normal modes of navigation, and submarines must navigate on the surface while displaying their flag, as stipulated in Article 20 of UNCLOS.[2] Acts considered prejudicial, such as the threat or use of force, intelligence gathering, or interference with coastal state communications, render passage non-innocent under Article 19, justifying regulatory measures or denial by the archipelagic state.[15] Archipelagic states may enact laws and regulations on aspects like safety of navigation, protection of the marine environment, and prevention of fishing by foreign vessels during passage, provided these align with generally accepted international rules and are notified to the International Maritime Organization (IMO).[2] Archipelagic states retain the authority under Article 52(2) to temporarily suspend innocent passage in specific areas of their archipelagic waters for reasons of national security, without discriminating among foreign ships, following prior notification through appropriate channels such as the IMO.[2] This suspension power mirrors that in territorial seas (Article 25) but is constrained by the need to respect the navigational rights enshrined in UNCLOS, particularly where ASLP routes intersect.[15] In practice, states like Indonesia have invoked this regime to enforce surface navigation for submarines in non-ASLP areas, highlighting tensions over submerged transit interpretations.[16] The regime balances coastal sovereignty over internal waters with international navigation interests, but disputes arise from divergent interpretations, such as the extent of "normal mode" allowances or the validity of domestic laws restricting passage.[3] For instance, the Philippines' 2024 Archipelagic Sea Lanes Act reaffirms innocent passage restrictions outside designated lanes, emphasizing compliance with UNCLOS to counter excessive maritime claims.[8] Compliance with innocent passage rules is monitored through coastal state enforcement, including boarding and inspection under Article 25, ensuring passage does not evolve into territorial sea-like control absent ASLP provisions.[2]Archipelagic Sea Lanes Passage
Archipelagic sea lanes passage, as defined in Article 53 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), grants foreign ships and aircraft the right to continuous and expeditious unimpeded passage through designated sea lanes and overlying air routes in an archipelagic state's waters and adjacent territorial sea.[2] These lanes must encompass all normal navigational routes used internationally, ensuring they conform to generally accepted standards for safety and efficiency.[2] Absent such designations, foreign vessels revert to the regime of innocent passage under Article 52.[2] Designations require the archipelagic state to submit proposals to the competent international organization, identified as the International Maritime Organization (IMO), for circulation to states and approval if they meet UNCLOS criteria, including axis lines not exceeding specified deviations—typically 25 nautical miles to either side unless bordered by islands.[2][17] The archipelagic state retains authority to regulate matters like marine scientific research, environmental protection, and hazards to navigation within these lanes, but it may neither hamper passage nor temporarily suspend it, unlike innocent passage.[2] Passage must proceed without stopping or deviating unduly, though submarines may transit submerged and aircraft maintain altitude for safe flight.[2] Indonesia provides the primary example of implementation, designating partial archipelagic sea lanes in 1998 via IMO submission, comprising three north-south routes through its waters: one via the Malacca and Singapore Straits through the Natuna Sea, another through Lombok and Makassar Straits, and a third via Sunda Strait and southern approaches.[17][18] These lanes, while not covering all routes, were approved by IMO Resolution MSC.71(69) on May 19, 1998, after confirming compliance with safety norms, though Indonesia retains obligations to propose additional lanes for remaining normal routes.[19] No other archipelagic state has fully designated lanes; the Philippines enacted an Archipelagic Sea Lanes Act in November 2024 proposing three routes—through the Celebes Sea, Sulu Sea, and West Philippine Sea—but these await IMO review and have drawn scrutiny for potential restrictions on navigation freedoms.[8] In practice, ASLP balances archipelagic sovereignty with global navigation interests, but underutilization stems from designation complexities; states must ensure lanes reflect empirical shipping data to avoid disputes over "normal routes."[3] Failure to designate comprehensively can lead to reliance on innocent passage, which allows suspension, highlighting causal tensions between territorial control and maritime access.[2]Air Routes and Overflight Provisions
Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), archipelagic states possess the authority to designate air routes above designated archipelagic sea lanes to facilitate the continuous and expeditious passage of foreign aircraft through or over their archipelagic waters and adjacent territorial seas.[1] Article 53(1) specifies that such air routes must be suitable for foreign aircraft, ensuring they align with normal passage routes used for overflight.[2] This provision balances the sovereignty of the archipelagic state over its waters with international navigation and aviation interests, extending the right of archipelagic sea lanes passage (ASLP) to include overflight in the normal mode—defined as continuous, expeditious, and unobstructed transit without threat to the state's peace, good order, or security.[1] All foreign aircraft, including military and commercial, enjoy the right of ASLP over these designated air routes, subject to non-deviation exceeding 25 nautical miles from axis lines during passage, where feasible based on safety and navigation requirements.[1] Archipelagic states may prescribe traffic separation schemes for these air routes to manage flow, but such measures cannot impede the exercise of passage rights or hamper innocent passage in non-designated areas.[2] Article 54 imposes duties on aircraft during ASLP equivalent to those for ships, prohibiting activities like weapons exercises, intelligence gathering, or propaganda that could endanger the archipelagic state's security.[3] Outside designated sea lanes and air routes, UNCLOS does not confer a general right of overflight for foreign aircraft over archipelagic waters; such airspace is treated as internal, requiring prior authorization consistent with international civil aviation norms under the Chicago Convention, absent specific ASLP provisions.[20] Implementation of air route designations remains limited among archipelagic states. Indonesia, the first to formally designate archipelagic sea lanes under Article 53 in 1996 via Government Regulation No. 37, included corresponding air routes but confined them to principal corridors, leaving substantial archipelagic airspace subject to case-by-case permissions rather than unimpeded overflight rights.[17] The Philippines enacted its Archipelagic Sea Lanes Act in November 2023, effective 2024, designating three principal sea lanes with overlying air routes to operationalize UNCLOS provisions, though critics argue it imposes interpretive limits on military aircraft transit not explicitly supported by the treaty text.[21] Where no sea lanes or air routes are designated, Article 52 limits passage rights in archipelagic waters primarily to innocent passage for ships, with no analogous overflight entitlement for aircraft, reinforcing the archipelagic state's control over unscheduled or non-routine aerial transit.[1] These provisions reflect a compromise from UNCLOS negotiations, prioritizing designated corridors for high-traffic international aviation while preserving territorial integrity in peripheral areas.[3]Historical Development
Pre-UNCLOS Archipelagic Concepts
Prior to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), customary international law afforded no special status to archipelagos, treating each island or islet as a discrete entity entitled to a narrow territorial sea—typically three nautical miles from its baselines—while the intervening waters constituted high seas subject to freedom of navigation for all states.[10] This fragmented approach stemmed from 19th-century precedents emphasizing mare liberum principles, which prioritized open access over unified territorial claims by island groups.[22] Maritime powers such as the United Kingdom and the United States upheld this regime to safeguard global trade routes, viewing broader archipelagic enclosures as encroachments on high seas freedoms.[23] The concept of an integrated archipelagic entity emerged in the mid-20th century amid decolonization, as newly independent states in Southeast Asia and the Pacific sought to consolidate sovereignty over vast inter-island waters for defense, resource control, and national unity.[24] Indonesia formalized this doctrine through Prime Minister Djuanda's declaration on December 13, 1957, asserting that "all waters around, between, and connecting the islands of Indonesia" formed integral parts of national territory, effectively enclosing approximately 3 million square kilometers of sea as internal waters without regard to strait's width.[25] This unilateral move, prompted by security concerns over fragmented sovereignty across more than 13,000 islands, drew limited initial protests from affected states like Australia and Japan but lacked widespread international acceptance, relying instead on domestic legislation such as Government Regulation No. 10 of 1956.[23] The Philippines similarly advanced an archipelagic unity principle rooted in its 1935 Constitution, which defined national territory as comprising "all the islands and waters" forming "one and the same" domain, implying enclosure of inter-island seas as internal waters closed to foreign vessels except by permission.[26] In 1956, the Philippines proposed to the International Law Commission that archipelagos be regarded as single units with straight baselines connecting outermost points, a stance reiterated in diplomatic notes and reflected in its 7,000-plus island geography.[27] These claims, like Indonesia's, prioritized geographic integrity over traditional navigational rights but encountered resistance; the 1958 Geneva Conference on the Law of the Sea omitted archipelagic provisions due to insufficient consensus, deferring the issue to future deliberations.[28] Early multilateral discussions, including the International Law Commission's 1951–1956 work, acknowledged archipelagos as "formations of two or more islands" but rejected special regimes, proposing instead that they generate territorial seas akin to mainland coasts without enclosing internal waters.[24] Proponents of archipelagic concepts argued from first principles of statehood and effective control, citing natural unity and historical usage, yet these lacked binding force absent codification, leaving unilateral assertions vulnerable to challenges under prevailing customary law.[29] By the 1970s, such claims had influenced preparatory UNCLOS III talks, highlighting tensions between coastal state sovereignty and navigational interests that prefigured the convention's compromises.[24]Negotiations and Adoption in UNCLOS 1982
The Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS III) convened its first session from December 3 to 15, 1973, at United Nations Headquarters in New York, initiating negotiations that addressed, among other issues, the legal status of archipelagos comprising mid-ocean island states.[30] Over eleven sessions spanning 1973 to 1982, with participation from 160 states, the conference incorporated the archipelagic state concept into Part IV (Articles 46–54) of the resulting convention, driven by advocacy from a dedicated group of archipelagic states including Indonesia and the Philippines.[31] These states sought to enclose inter-island waters within straight baselines to assert unified sovereignty, contrasting with traditional straight baseline rules under the 1958 Convention on the Territorial Sea that applied mainly to indented coasts.[24] Central debates centered on balancing archipelagic claims to internal waters against demands from maritime powers—such as the United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union—for unimpeded navigation, rejecting full enclosure as internal waters that would restrict foreign vessel transit.[32] Archipelagic proponents initially pushed for unqualified sovereignty over enclosed waters, but opposition highlighted risks to global trade routes through archipelagos like Indonesia's, where over 13,000 islands span 1.9 million square kilometers.[24] By the fourth session in 1976, negotiations narrowed to mid-ocean archipelagos, excluding continental fringe states, to forge consensus; this excluded broader claims while accommodating states with dispersed islands separated by significant sea distances.[33] Key compromises established "archipelagic baselines" drawn between outermost islands and drying reefs, subject to strict criteria: the water-to-land ratio within baselines must range from 1:1 to 9:1, with no segment exceeding 100 nautical miles except in limited cases up to three times that length.[2] Enclosed areas became "archipelagic waters" rather than internal waters, granting all states rights of innocent passage (Article 52) and, where designated, archipelagic sea lanes passage (ASLP) approximating transit passage through straits (Article 53), ensuring continuous, expeditious transit for ships and aircraft without threat to the archipelagic state.[1] This regime addressed maritime states' concerns by preserving high seas freedoms beyond baselines while affirming archipelagic sovereignty over resources and baselines, a package deal reflecting informal bilateral arrangements among archipelagic advocates to secure broader support.[24] The convention, including the archipelagic provisions, was adopted on December 10, 1982, in Montego Bay, Jamaica, after nine years of deliberations that produced a comprehensive text balancing coastal and navigational interests.[30] These articles entered into force on November 16, 1994, upon the 60th ratification, enabling states like Indonesia to formalize claims while subjecting them to international scrutiny for baseline conformity.[2] The framework's adoption marked a departure from prior customary law, prioritizing empirical geographic criteria over unilateral assertions to mitigate disputes over excessive enclosures.[31]Declarations and Ratifications Post-1982
Fiji became the first state to ratify the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on 10 December 1982, coinciding with the date the treaty opened for signature, and thereby endorsed the archipelagic state provisions under Part IV without specific reservations but in affirmation of its island group configuration.[20] The Philippines acceded to UNCLOS on 7 June 1984, issuing a declaration upon ratification that specified archipelagic baselines around its main islands while designating certain outlying areas, such as the Kalayaan Island Group and Bajo de Masinloc, under a "regime of islands" rather than full archipelagic enclosure, to comply with Article 47's criteria on water-to-land ratios and connectivity.[34] [24] Indonesia ratified on 3 February 1986, declaring that UNCLOS confirmed its longstanding archipelagic status as proclaimed in the 1957 Djuanda Declaration, with straight baselines enclosing its over 17,000 islands and emphasizing sovereignty over internal waters subject to innocent and sea lanes passage rights.[24] [25] Papua New Guinea ratified UNCLOS on 14 January 1997, depositing coordinates for archipelagic baselines around its Bismarck and Louisiade archipelagos, which enclose significant internal waters while preserving passage regimes, though its claims have faced scrutiny for exceeding the maximum water-to-land ratio permissible under Article 47(2).[35] [36] Subsequent claimants, such as the Bahamas, which ratified on 29 July 2008 after initial signature in 1982, affirmed archipelagic baselines enclosing its approximately 700 islands, prioritizing resource jurisdiction over traditional high seas pockets.[30] Later post-ratification assertions included the Seychelles, which ratified UNCLOS on 16 August 1991 but formally claimed archipelagic status in 2008 by enacting baselines around its 115 islands, converting prior territorial sea claims into archipelagic waters to enhance sovereignty despite limited land area.[14] Similarly, Mauritius ratified on 4 October 1994 and declared archipelagic baselines in 2005 for its Chagos Archipelago components, though this faced international objections related to the territory's disputed status.[14] The Maldives, upon ratification on 7 September 1988, progressively implemented archipelagic baselines by 2009, enclosing its atoll chains to assert control over fisheries and submarine resources amid concerns over baseline deviations from Article 47's straight-line requirements between outermost points.[4] These declarations, permitted under Article 310 provided they do not purport to exclude or modify UNCLOS obligations, often included submissions of baseline charts to the UN Secretary-General for publicity, as required by Article 47(4), though some drew objections from maritime powers like the United States for potentially restricting navigation freedoms.[30] [10] By 2025, over 20 states had invoked archipelagic status through such post-1982 actions, expanding the regime's application beyond the convention's negotiating core while prompting ongoing deposits of updated coordinates to address coastal changes.[4]Recognized Archipelagic States
Original UNCLOS Archipelagic States
The original archipelagic states under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) comprise the Bahamas, Fiji, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines, all signatories to the treaty on 10 December 1982 and fitting the definition in Article 46 as states constituted wholly by one or more archipelagos.[2] These nations leveraged Part IV of UNCLOS to formalize baselines enclosing their archipelagic waters, over which they exercise full sovereignty subject to rights of innocent passage and sea lanes passage, distinguishing their claims from continental coastal states.[1] Their configurations—spanning thousands of islands and vast enclosed seas—necessitated the doctrine to secure territorial integrity against expansive high seas claims that would fragment their maritime domains.[24] Indonesia, comprising over 17,000 islands, pioneered the archipelagic concept with the Djuanda Declaration on 13 December 1957, proclaiming waters between islands as national unity rather than international straits, a stance that directly informed UNCLOS negotiations despite initial opposition from maritime powers.[37] It ratified UNCLOS on 3 February 1986 and deposited archipelagic baseline charts with the UN Secretary-General to comply with Article 47(9).[35] The Philippines, with approximately 7,641 islands, established baselines via Republic Act No. 5446 in 1967 (amending its 1961 decree), ratified UNCLOS on 8 May 1984, and similarly deposited charts, though its claims faced scrutiny for exceeding the 100:1 water-to-land ratio limit in some areas.[30][5] The Bahamas, an Atlantic archipelago of over 700 islands, ratified on 29 August 1983, applying baselines to enclose its waters and asserting sovereignty while recognizing traditional fishing rights under Article 51.[30] Fiji, encompassing about 330 islands in the Pacific, signed UNCLOS at adoption and ratified it promptly thereafter, using the regime to consolidate control over its exclusive economic zone resources amid post-colonial maritime boundary needs.[35] Papua New Guinea, with diverse island groups including New Britain and New Ireland, also signed in 1982 and ratified on 14 January 1997, integrating archipelagic provisions to manage its extensive coral reef systems and fisheries.[30] These states' early adoption underscored the doctrine's utility for resource-dependent island nations, though implementation required balancing sovereignty with navigational freedoms to gain international acceptance.[38]Subsequent States Claiming Status
Following the initial recognition of five archipelagic states at the adoption of the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)—the Bahamas, Fiji, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines—additional states have claimed archipelagic status through ratifications, declarations, or domestic legislation. These subsequent claimants, primarily small island developing states in the Caribbean, Indian Ocean, Pacific, and Atlantic, number around 15 as of assessments in the 2010s.[3] Their assertions typically involve drawing archipelagic baselines to enclose internal waters, thereby asserting sovereignty over resources while permitting rights of innocent passage and archipelagic sea lanes passage under UNCLOS Part IV.[4] Notable examples include the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, which incorporated archipelagic provisions upon ratifying UNCLOS in 1997 and 1993, respectively, to consolidate control over dispersed island groups.[3] In the Indian Ocean, Mauritius and Seychelles have claimed status, with Seychelles depositing related maritime zone notifications in the early 2000s, enhancing jurisdiction over exclusive economic zones encompassing coral atolls and granite islands.[39] The Maldives, comprising 1,192 islands across 26 atolls, asserted archipelagic baselines in 2008 legislation to manage fisheries and tourism within enclosed waters.[3] A more recent and contentious claim came from the Dominican Republic, which enacted Act No. 66-07 on May 22, 2007, proclaiming itself an archipelagic state and defining baselines connecting the eastern coast of Hispaniola to offshore cays, enclosing approximately 4,000 square nautical miles as archipelagic waters.[40] This legislation aimed to secure resource rights but has faced international scrutiny, as the Dominican Republic shares the main island with Haiti, arguably failing UNCLOS Article 46(a)'s criterion of being "constituted wholly by one or more archipelagos."[41] The United States, in its Limits in the Seas analysis, does not recognize the claim and protests excessive enclosure of high seas.[41] Similarly, the Comoros finalized archipelagic baselines in 2010, building on a 1982 proclamation, to encompass its volcanic islands and surrounding waters.[14] Other claimants, such as Antigua and Barbuda, Cape Verde, Jamaica, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Trinidad and Tobago, have drawn baselines via national laws or orders since the 1990s, often depositing coordinates with the UN Secretary-General as required by UNCLOS Article 47.[3] Kiribati and the Marshall Islands have enacted enabling statutes but have not yet published specific baselines, maintaining potential for future claims over vast atoll chains spanning millions of square kilometers.[4] These assertions reflect efforts to adapt UNCLOS provisions to unique geographic realities, though compliance with baseline length ratios (water-to-land area of 1:1 to 9:1) and connectivity requirements varies, prompting occasional diplomatic protests from maritime powers concerned with navigation freedoms.[4]