Can I live on an unoccupied island? [closed]

Can I live on an unoccupied island? [closed] - Person Holding Can With Blue and White Knit Sweater

Suppose that I am going to unoccupied island in Oceania, the Carribean, or somewhere else.

Suppose I find an island where nobody is there, and nobody knows about it. If I invade it like a pirate (maybe alone or with friends)— and of course I am a rich guy, and have money to build a house, or buy some big ship, and have money to buy food and other goods from other inhabited islands to survive there— and suppose that I have a passport of another country, would that be considered unlawful? What punishment would I get?



Best Answer

I suppose it depends whose the island belongs to. If you find a completely unknown island, I suppose it will be yours, or at least you can claim it. If it belongs to another country, you will have to respect the law of this country, in terms of settlement and building construction.

If you take the example of Clipperton island, a French territory with no inhabitant, the French law applies and anyone who wants to access it or start a business (most likely to use its natural resources) should apply to the French authority:

[le] Haut-commissaire de la République en Polynésie française, représentant de l'État, à qui il appartenait d'accorder des autorisations aux particuliers désirant aborder l'atoll ou y obtenir des concessions d'exploitation.

The Wikipedia article still mentions that many smugglers and fishermen most likely come to the island and a French military boat sometimes comes and, among other duties, replaces the vandalised French flag and commemorative stone.




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Can you move to an abandoned island?

To live on a deserted island, first try to find a source of fresh water, and then see if there are any natural formations around to use as a shelter. If not, you can build one for yourself using whatever materials you have at hand.

Can I live on a deserted island?

You can survive for around three weeks without food but without adequate drinking water, especially in a tropical climate, you have about three days until you die a miserable death. Sources of Water can be found in a variety of ways.

Can you claim an island?

Can you claim an unclaimed island? The answer is yes, you can claim unclaimed islands but it is going to be difficult. Unclaimed islands are usually unclaimed for a reason and are mostly declared national monuments.

Is there any island no one owns?

Bir Tawil. Perhaps the most famous \u201cunclaimed land\u201d in the world is Bir Tawil. In 2014, author Alastair Bonnett described Bir Tawil as the only place on Earth that was habitable but was not claimed by any recognised government. So why does nobody own it?



Beautiful Islands For Sale Nobody Wants To Buy Or Live On




More answers regarding can I live on an unoccupied island? [closed]

Answer 2

The key is "and nobody knows about it" - I doubt such an island exists, much less in the habitable zones of our planet. All the land, including little rocky islands, is known and mapped and claimed.

In some countries, land that nobody holds a deed for belongs to the country itself and you are forbidden to do certain things (such as building houses) on it. See Crown Land for example. It's open to the public but it's not yours to do with as you will. In other countries, land belongs (in large swaths including small islands just offshore) to the nearest village, and a visitor can't so much as swim at a beach without paying a small fee to the village chief. In still other countries, there just isn't any land that nobody holds a deed for, and that includes your "deserted" islands with nobody appearing to know about them.

The days of "I claim this land for X" are long gone. You would have to buy the island, and there's a good chance whoever owns it isn't willing to sell it to you.

Answer 3

Actually, if you take a piece of land, and no one claims it for a while (meaning enact court action against you on order to recover the legal possession of such a land) you will eventually acquire the property/ownership of it through the legal institute that is called "Acquisitive Prescription" in US and UK law systems (it is called "Usucaption" from Latin "usucapio" in Civil Law systems such as France and Germany).
The institute shouldn't consider your country of citizenship on regards of your ownership rights arising from acquisitive prescription, however some countries and jurisdictions may do consider it.
In that case only a national of those countries would be able to achieve ownership rights through acquisitive prescription or usucaption.
Just do some research on court cases and decisions on acquisitive prescription (or usucaption, usucapio, or something like, if you looking to move to a country which legal system is based on civil, and not common, law).

Through this research you will find how long you will need to remain as a peaceful occupant of a land parcel to claim its ownership through acquisitive prescription.
Then go there, look for a piece of "res dereclita" (abandoned land) and take it over.
If no one goes against you in a court of law to recover that land, it will eventually be legally yours.

Answer 4

Well, if you live there, by definition it will no longer be unoccupied ;-)

Seriously, though; I think there would be no problem legally - if no country or person owns it, I think no-one could stop you living there for free, even if that would mean setting up a tent and catching fish.

Answer 5

Much better to make an artificial island, so that you can move it where you want. A friend of mine, a journalist, has created one in Amsterdan with recycled PET in early 2000. Then he covered it with grass, a nice house and some trees. He also wrote a book about that experiment.

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