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China and East Asian Strategic Dynamics: the Shaping of a New
Regional Order, edited by Mingjiang Li and Dongmin Lee, examines
how China's remarkable economic growth and its proactive diplomatic
efforts in recent years have not only shored up its importance in
global issues, but also induced a transformation of the strategic
dynamics in East Asia. The authors argue that major power relations
in the region appear to be driven by some new momentum along with
the changing international environment. The contributors of this
edited volume are well-known scholars in their areas of specialty,
and the book is divided into five parts. The first part discusses
China's soft and hard power in East Asia. The second examines China
and the strategic interactions between major powers; this
particular section is devoted to discussion on the strategic
responses of the major regional powers the United States, Japan,
Korea, India and ASEAN to China's rise. Part three focuses on
China's strategic approach to East Asian regionalism. Of particular
note are China's active leadership role in institution-building
efforts, strategic calculations, and preference for an informal
approach. The fourth section analyzes the Cross-Taiwan Strait
relations and their impact on both China and East Asia. The final
section of China and East Asian Strategic Dynamics addresses the
issue of China and maritime order in East Asia. China and East
Asian Strategic Dynamics: the Shaping of a New Regional Order,
edited by Mingjiang Li and Dongmin Lee, is a pioneering work. Given
that the rise of China is a prominent issue in politics and
economics worldwide, this edited collection is essential for a wide
audience of policy-makers, academics, and students alike.
On 11 April 2016, Timor-Leste initiated a compulsory non-binding
conciliation proceeding against Australia under Annex V of the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) on its
maritime boundary dispute with Australia in the Timor Sea. On 6
March 2018, the parties signed a settlement treaty on the basis of
the proposal of the Conciliation Commission. Two months later, the
Conciliation Commission issued its report, marking the conclusion
of the first ever conciliation proceeding under Annex V of
UNCLOS.This book provides detailed analyses of the proceedings and
a step-by-step account of the conciliation process, as well as its
wider implications for dispute settlement under UNCLOS and beyond.
The various chapters explore a wide range of issues, including an
overview of conciliation as a means of dispute settlement and the
conciliation procedure in UNCLOS, as well as the origins and
historical background of the maritime boundary dispute between
Timor-Leste and Australia. The book also provides a comprehensive
examination of each step of the conciliation proceedings, including
the role of the Conciliation Commission, the Conciliation
Commission's Decision on Competence, the issue of joint
development, and the Maritime Boundaries Treaty, which Timor-Leste
and Australia concluded as the legal outcome of the conciliation
proceedings. Critically, the book offers insightful perspectives
from Australia and Timor-Leste on the conciliation process. The
book is an important contribution to the research and analysis of
the Timor Sea conciliation. As one of the first books on the case,
it will raise awareness and bring more familiarity with
conciliation as a viable and effective dispute settlement process,
thereby encouraging states to consider conciliation as a means to
settle their disputes.
Freedom of Navigation and Globalization offers a timely analysis of
current issues in the Law of the Sea in six Parts. Part I examines
co-operative measures taken within the Southeast Asia region to
combat piracy and armed robbery against ships, and the historical
activities of the Republic of Korea navy in countering piracy. Part
II focuses on transnational threats including counter proliferation
activities, freedom of navigation, Illegal, Unreported and
Unregulated (IUU) fishing, and the regulation of private maritime
security companies. Part III consists of two essays on development
in the Arctic Ocean. The first updates the activities of the Arctic
Council, the second looks at cooperative measures taken by China,
Japan, and Korea with respect to science in the Arctic. In Part IV
the topic of energy security and sealanes is taken up.
Institutional building within ASEAN is examined for maritime
security in Southeast Asia. Freedom of navigation is compared with
the straight baselines of China in the South China Sea. In the next
essay, cooperative efforts to enhance navigational safety and
environmental protection in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore
are explored. Part V considers balancing marine environmental
protection and freedom of navigation. The European Union's Marine
Strategy Framework Directive is reviewed. The dispute settlement
regime in UNCLOS and the 2001 International Law Commission Articles
on the Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts
are analyzed for flag State responsibility for pollution
violations. The current mechanisms in the South China Sea marine
environment are also evaluated. Part VI discusses marine data
collection in the context of its applicability to Part XIII of
UNCLOS. Attention is given to the various categories and their
legal consequences. The last paper in the volume outlines global
challenges such as global warming, rising sea level and changes in
the ice over in the Polar Regions.
Submarine fiber optic cables are critical communications
infrastructure for States around the world. They are laid on the
seabed, are often no bigger than a garden hose, and transmit
immense amounts of data across oceans. These cables are the
backbone of the internet and phone services and underpin core State
interests, such as the finance sector, shipping, commerce and
banking industries. Without the capacity to transmit and receive
data via submarine cables, the economic security of States would be
severely compromised. Despite the fact that 95 per cent of all data
and telecommunications between States are transmitted via submarine
cables, there is little understanding of how these cables operate.
As a result some States have developed policies and laws that
undermine the integrity of international telecommunications
systems. Submarine Cables: The Handbook of Law and Policy provides
a one-stop-shop of essential information relating to the
international governance of submarine cables. The Handbook is a
unique collaboration between international lawyers and experts from
the submarine cable industry. It provides a practical insight into
the law and policy issues that affect the protection of submarine
cables, as well as the laying, maintenance and operation of such
cables. In addition, the law and policy issues in relation to other
special purpose cables, such as power cables, marine scientific
research cables, military cables, and offshore energy cables, are
also addressed.
This Handbook aims to provide practical guidance on good treaty
practice. It presents a range of examples from the practice of
several States and international organisations and explains the
actions that need to be taken to create a new treaty, bring it into
force, operate it, amend it and wind it up, on both the
international and the domestic plane. It also explores what
constitutes good treaty practice, and develops generic principles
or criteria against which to evaluate these examples. It provides a
useful analytical tool to enable each government and international
organisation to identify and develop the best treaty practice for
their circumstances, recognising that one size does not necessarily
fit all. It will be of interest to those working with treaties and
treaty procedures in governments, international organisations and
legal practice, as well as legal academics and students wishing to
gain insight into the realities of treaty practice.
Over the last few decades there has been growing recognition of the
importance of a peaceful and stable South China Sea for
Indo-Pacific security and development, a recognition that has been
underlain, paradoxically, by the increasingly precarious situation
in this body of water that straddles critical shipping lanes from
the Indian to the Pacific Ocean. This book informs its readership
of the most recent developments in the South China Sea with
insightful and prescient analyses from both legal and international
relations perspectives. It delves into the policy perspectives and
deliberations of the various relevant regional and extra-regional
actors in the South China Sea dispute, the exercise of
international law in the context of the changing regional political
landscape, and the promise and pitfalls of past, current, and
potential initiatives to manage and settle the dispute. Written by
some of the most well-known scholars and knowledgeable insiders in
the fields South China Sea studies, the collection offers a wide
array of diverse views that should help enrich the ongoing global
discussion on conflict management and resolution in the South China
Sea.
China and East Asian Strategic Dynamics: the Shaping of a New
Regional Order, edited by Mingjiang Li and Dongmin Lee, examines
how China's remarkable economic growth and its proactive diplomatic
efforts in recent years have not only shored up its importance in
global issues, but also induced a transformation of the strategic
dynamics in East Asia. The authors argue that major power relations
in the region appear to be driven by some new momentum along with
the changing international environment. The contributors of this
edited volume are well-known scholars in their areas of specialty,
and the book is divided into five parts. The first part discusses
China's soft and hard power in East Asia. The second examines China
and the strategic interactions between major powers; this
particular section is devoted to discussion on the strategic
responses of the major regional powers-the United States, Japan,
Korea, India and ASEAN-to China's rise. Part three focuses on
China's strategic approach to East Asian regionalism. Of particular
note are China's active leadership role in institution-building
efforts, strategic calculations, and preference for an informal
approach. The fourth section analyzes the Cross-Taiwan Strait
relations and their impact on both China and East Asia. The final
section of China and East Asian Strategic Dynamics addresses the
issue of China and maritime order in East Asia. China and East
Asian Strategic Dynamics: the Shaping of a New Regional Order,
edited by Mingjiang Li and Dongmin Lee, is a pioneering work. Given
that the rise of China is a prominent issue in politics and
economics worldwide, this edited collection is essential for a wide
audience of policy-makers, academics, and students alike.
The reputation and achievement of the ASEAN Community hinges on
compliance. This seminal book discusses whether ASEAN's faith in
dispute settlement and monitoring mechanisms as a means to better
compliance is justified and delves into the extent to which they
can facilitate ASEAN Community building. It provides the first
comprehensive and systematic analysis of ASEAN's compliance with
its instruments, and enables readers to see ASEAN as an
organisation increasingly based on law and institutions. Readers
will also learn how ASEAN balances a thin line between law and
institutions on the one hand and diplomacy and realism on the
other. Scholars of adjudicatory mechanisms will find this book a
fascinating addition to the literature available, and it will serve
as a 'go-to' reference for ASEAN state agencies. The book will also
interest academics and practitioners working on comparative and
cross-disciplinary studies of dispute settlement, monitoring
mechanisms, compliance, and international and regional
organisations.
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