Close
(0) items
You have no items in your shopping cart.
All Categories
    Filters
    Currency
    Search

    Cartner on the International Law of the Shipmaster

    £190.00
    Cartner on the International Law of the Shipmaster: On The New Command at Sea
    ISBN: 9781032255392
    *

    Please select the required format.

    Ship to
    *
    *
    Shipping Method
    Name
    Estimated Delivery
    Price
    No shipping options

    Author: John A.C. Cartner

    Published July 2022

    This unique book rethinks and rewrites the previous edition. It categorises simply the nine interactive legal duties of the shipmaster, analysing and relating them to laws and conventions within a single volume.

    Cartner on the International Law of the Shipmaster contends that command depends on decision-making, and that shipmasters are not provided sufficient, timely, relevant, and pertinent information for command decisions. The book proposes voyage planning follow the spacecraft model of the USA's National Aeronautics and Space Administration, providing readers with a metric for command. It constructively criticises the conventions and management and is aimed at reducing catastrophes by focusing on the hitherto elusive human factor in the shipmaster. Cartner proposes that command at sea be its own profession and discipline with those called to it specifically trained in its intricacies; he argues that current ships are not designed to be command-worthy or security-worthy and that management should reorder its relationships with shipmasters as tactical managers afloat. The insights the book provides are an invaluable aid to decision making for the modern civil commander and anyone association with this pivotal and essential profession.

    This book is a necessary reference and guide for shipmasters, technologists, naval architects, regulators, underwriters, students, practitioners and courts of maritime law and command worldwide.

    Table of Contents

    Prologue : The Civil Commander

    Part 1: Shipping and Navies

    Part 2: Definition of Civil Command at Sea

    Part 3: The Maritime Venture

    Part 4: Seven Pillars of Wisdom

    Part 5: The Nine Duties of the Civil Commander

    Part 6: From Whence the Civil Commander Came

    Part 7: Modern Laws and the Licensee and Appointee

    Part 8: Technologically-Driven Revolution in Shipping

    Part 9: The TITANIC

    Part 10: The Last Century?

    Part 11: Hang [Him or Her] from a Sour Apple Tree!

    Chapter 1 : The Duty of Self:Toward the Compleat Civil Commander at Sea

    Part 1: The Duty of Self and of Self-Competence

    Part 2: The Fit and Informed Self-Competent Civil Commander

    Part 3: Civil Commander Resilience

    Part 4: The Civil Commander Manager

    Part 5: Lead, Follow or Get Out of the Way

    Part 6: The Progression To Command

    Part 7: Three Existential Identities

    Part 8: Death, Be Not Proud

    Part 9: The Legal Duties of Self to the Offices Held and to Others

    Chapter 2: THE DUTY TO PUBLIC AUTHORITY: The Regulatory Regime of Command at Sea

    Part 1: How the world is organised

    Part 2: Registry States

    Part 3: Coastal States

    Part 4: Port States

    Part 5: The Natal state

    Part 6: Interdiction

    Chapter 3: THE DUTY TO PRIVATE AUTHORITY: The Private Tactical Mission in Command at Sea

    Part 1: Agencies of the Shipmaster

    Part 2: The Owner

    Part 3: The Shipmaster and His or Her Agency

    Part 4: The Shipmaster’s Agency Contract

    Part 5: Acts within the Scope of Authority.

    Part 6: Torts of the Shipmaster

    Part 7: Limitation of the civil commander's liability

    Part 8: The Seven R’s: (1) Repudiation (and Nullification), (2) Rescission (pleaded and Cancellation), (3) Renunciation, (4) Release, (5) Ratification (And Acquiescence and Waiver) and (6) Retroactiveness

    Chapter 4: THE DUTY TO THE VESSEL: The Command-worthy Vessel and Commander at Sea

    Part 1: Seaworthiness

    Part 2: The Conventions as to Vessels.

    Part 3: Solas 78 as to the duty of the Vessel

    Part 4: Security of the vessel

    Chapter 5: THE DUTY TO CARGO: The Duty Safely to Carry and Contain

    Part 1. Observing and Measuring Cargo
    Part 2: The Bill of Lading

    Part 3: SOLAS 78 Chapter VI

    Part 4: SOLAS 78 Chapter VII– Carriage of Dangerous Goods

    Part 5: Charterparties

    CHAPTER 6: DUTY TO LIFE

    Part 1: The MSC 2006

    Part 2: MLC 2006 Title 1: Minimum Requirements for Seafarers

    Part 3: MSCL, 2006 Title 2: Conditions of Employment

    Part 4: MLC 2006 Title 3: Accommodations, Recreational Facilities, Catering

    Part 5: MLC 2006 Title 4: Health Protection, Medical Care, Welfare, Social Security

    Part 6: MLC 2006 Title 5: Compliance and Enforcement

    Part 7: Other Lives

    Part 8: The STCW 95 as Amm. 2010

    Part 9: Unsafe, Dangerous and Enclosed Spaces

    Chapter 7: Duty to the Voyage: The Voyage is the Mission

    Part 1: SOLAS 78

    Part 2: Radiocommunications

    Part 3: STCW and the New Civil Commander

    Part 4: International Code for Ships Operating in Polar Waters (the Polar Code)

    Part 5: The Mission Must Continue: Deliver the Goods

    Chapter 8: Duty to the Environments: Air and Ocean, Inside and Out

    Part 1: Fire and the Internal Environment

    Part 2: The External Environment and MARPOL 73/78

    Ch. 9: Epilogue: The Duty to Information and the Steps to Change

    Part 1: The Civil Commander

    Part 2: Vessels and Command

    Download MS SeaReaderMS SeaReader User Guide
    How to activate the MS SeaReaderHow to find new Supplements - Errata MS SeaReader
    How to download a publication in MS SeaReader

    MS SeaReader - Catalogue

    SeaReader 1.6 includes many minor changes and bug fixes. New Edition was released September 2023.

    SeaReader is a digital technical catalogue for use on board vessels or in the office. It stores all of the publications that are needed on board and displays them in a digital format that is fast and easy to use.

    New Editions
    Publications that are in the announcements section of the distributor portal will also appear as “New Publications” in SeaReader. They will be at the top of the Catalogue view and be marked with a yellow star.

    Offline Mode
    SeaReader can now operate without any internet connection. The user must provide their distributor with an Activation file from the settings window of a SeaReader client.

    Custom Notes
    Users are now able to add their own custom notes to the publications inside SeaReader. These notes can then be searched for and the user can jump to the page for easy access to important content. Notes can also be exported and shared to other users. This will allow educators to share premade notes with students or shipping companies to indicate important items of text in a publication.

    eBooks are available to purchase individually or in bulk and once installed, the SeaReader is easy to use.

    The digital library is easy to access and update and you don’t need to be online to access the publications. SeaReader makes compliance inspections easy by having the latest mandatory publications on board at all times.
    The shipping costs and administration associated with maintaining a paper library are removed - there are no physical books to ship and the entire library is updated with the click of a button.

    SeaReader contains Flag State Regulations from Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Canada, Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Denmark, Hong Kong, Isle of Man, Liberia, Malta, Marshall Islands, Netherlands, Norway, Panama, Singapore, United Kingdom, USA and Red Ensign Group. Included e-books from IMO, Brown, Son & Ferguson, Imray, and a growing list of other maritime publishers.

    SeaReader keeps the administrative work on board to a minimum as the latest set of publications are always available.
    The easy to use system makes it quick and easy to see what books are on board the vessel. One annual licence provides access to paid for ebooks on two separate PCs.

    SeaReader is simple, very easy and intuitive to use. With one-click updating and filtered search results, it is quick and easy to find the information you need. There is no need for additional work to make sure your vessel is flag state compliant, as SeaReader does this for you.

    Key features

    Full digital technical libraryIMO and flag state approved
    Quick and easy to use and updateEasily access certificates for inspections
    Removes shipping costs of paper libraryNo unlocking
    Compliance made easyReduces administration on board
    New books added regularlyOnline and offline updating
    Filtered searchingWindows-only, Macs are not supported
    Offline ModeCustom Notes

    Windows-only software.

    As a Mac user you will need to use a Windows emulator (e.g., Boot Camp or Parallels Desktop) to use the MS SeaReader.

    Boot Camp is a built-in tool that supports Dual-boot on Mac. It is accessible in the Utilities under the name Boot Camp Assistant. This emulator lets you have both Windows and Mac installed on the same disk and run them. You can either run Windows or Mac at a time and the other OS or its folders cannot be accessed. To get started with Boot Camp Assistant on Mac please see the following link.

    Minimum System Requirements

    •  Windows PC with Windows version 10 or 11
    •  8 GB RAM. 15GB hard disk space
    •  HD and above resolutions 1360x768 (minimum 1024x720)
    •  Minimum .NET 6.0 Desktop Runtime
    •  Internet connection needed for installation

    https://support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/bootcamp-assistant/welcome/mac

    Once purchased, we will send you your redeem code together with instructions on how to access your e-book. You can only redeem the code once.

    Once redeemed the e-book is non-returnable and non-refundable.

    You will need to create an account at https://bookshelf.vitalsource.com/

    Select the Redeem code option from the top menu or click on the button on the page.

    Enter your code in the box displayed. Selecting redeem will add this book to your library.

    For all technical support please visit: support.vitalsource.com

    Alternatively have a look at some helpful video tutorials at: http://hubs.ly/H05cVnv0

    Author: John A.C. Cartner

    Published July 2022

    This unique book rethinks and rewrites the previous edition. It categorises simply the nine interactive legal duties of the shipmaster, analysing and relating them to laws and conventions within a single volume.

    Cartner on the International Law of the Shipmaster contends that command depends on decision-making, and that shipmasters are not provided sufficient, timely, relevant, and pertinent information for command decisions. The book proposes voyage planning follow the spacecraft model of the USA's National Aeronautics and Space Administration, providing readers with a metric for command. It constructively criticises the conventions and management and is aimed at reducing catastrophes by focusing on the hitherto elusive human factor in the shipmaster. Cartner proposes that command at sea be its own profession and discipline with those called to it specifically trained in its intricacies; he argues that current ships are not designed to be command-worthy or security-worthy and that management should reorder its relationships with shipmasters as tactical managers afloat. The insights the book provides are an invaluable aid to decision making for the modern civil commander and anyone association with this pivotal and essential profession.

    This book is a necessary reference and guide for shipmasters, technologists, naval architects, regulators, underwriters, students, practitioners and courts of maritime law and command worldwide.

    Table of Contents

    Prologue : The Civil Commander

    Part 1: Shipping and Navies

    Part 2: Definition of Civil Command at Sea

    Part 3: The Maritime Venture

    Part 4: Seven Pillars of Wisdom

    Part 5: The Nine Duties of the Civil Commander

    Part 6: From Whence the Civil Commander Came

    Part 7: Modern Laws and the Licensee and Appointee

    Part 8: Technologically-Driven Revolution in Shipping

    Part 9: The TITANIC

    Part 10: The Last Century?

    Part 11: Hang [Him or Her] from a Sour Apple Tree!

    Chapter 1 : The Duty of Self:Toward the Compleat Civil Commander at Sea

    Part 1: The Duty of Self and of Self-Competence

    Part 2: The Fit and Informed Self-Competent Civil Commander

    Part 3: Civil Commander Resilience

    Part 4: The Civil Commander Manager

    Part 5: Lead, Follow or Get Out of the Way

    Part 6: The Progression To Command

    Part 7: Three Existential Identities

    Part 8: Death, Be Not Proud

    Part 9: The Legal Duties of Self to the Offices Held and to Others

    Chapter 2: THE DUTY TO PUBLIC AUTHORITY: The Regulatory Regime of Command at Sea

    Part 1: How the world is organised

    Part 2: Registry States

    Part 3: Coastal States

    Part 4: Port States

    Part 5: The Natal state

    Part 6: Interdiction

    Chapter 3: THE DUTY TO PRIVATE AUTHORITY: The Private Tactical Mission in Command at Sea

    Part 1: Agencies of the Shipmaster

    Part 2: The Owner

    Part 3: The Shipmaster and His or Her Agency

    Part 4: The Shipmaster’s Agency Contract

    Part 5: Acts within the Scope of Authority.

    Part 6: Torts of the Shipmaster

    Part 7: Limitation of the civil commander's liability

    Part 8: The Seven R’s: (1) Repudiation (and Nullification), (2) Rescission (pleaded and Cancellation), (3) Renunciation, (4) Release, (5) Ratification (And Acquiescence and Waiver) and (6) Retroactiveness

    Chapter 4: THE DUTY TO THE VESSEL: The Command-worthy Vessel and Commander at Sea

    Part 1: Seaworthiness

    Part 2: The Conventions as to Vessels.

    Part 3: Solas 78 as to the duty of the Vessel

    Part 4: Security of the vessel

    Chapter 5: THE DUTY TO CARGO: The Duty Safely to Carry and Contain

    Part 1. Observing and Measuring Cargo
    Part 2: The Bill of Lading

    Part 3: SOLAS 78 Chapter VI

    Part 4: SOLAS 78 Chapter VII– Carriage of Dangerous Goods

    Part 5: Charterparties

    CHAPTER 6: DUTY TO LIFE

    Part 1: The MSC 2006

    Part 2: MLC 2006 Title 1: Minimum Requirements for Seafarers

    Part 3: MSCL, 2006 Title 2: Conditions of Employment

    Part 4: MLC 2006 Title 3: Accommodations, Recreational Facilities, Catering

    Part 5: MLC 2006 Title 4: Health Protection, Medical Care, Welfare, Social Security

    Part 6: MLC 2006 Title 5: Compliance and Enforcement

    Part 7: Other Lives

    Part 8: The STCW 95 as Amm. 2010

    Part 9: Unsafe, Dangerous and Enclosed Spaces

    Chapter 7: Duty to the Voyage: The Voyage is the Mission

    Part 1: SOLAS 78

    Part 2: Radiocommunications

    Part 3: STCW and the New Civil Commander

    Part 4: International Code for Ships Operating in Polar Waters (the Polar Code)

    Part 5: The Mission Must Continue: Deliver the Goods

    Chapter 8: Duty to the Environments: Air and Ocean, Inside and Out

    Part 1: Fire and the Internal Environment

    Part 2: The External Environment and MARPOL 73/78

    Ch. 9: Epilogue: The Duty to Information and the Steps to Change

    Part 1: The Civil Commander

    Part 2: Vessels and Command

    Product tags