Publication

Jun 2009

This review of literature highlights the common themes explored in existing research work on maritime security in the South China Sea. If controlling the seas is a direct reflection of the leverage and hierarchy of a country in the international community, the author argues, then the South China Sea is the epicenter of an emerging maritime regime. Here, nation states (regional and extra-regional), nonstate actors and international governmental organizations attempt to determine the rules of maritime trade. While all players have the common goal of establishing enduring influence over this strategically significant sea, most have diverging views on what constitutes as a 'threat' to maritime trade.

Download English (PDF, 10 pages, 152 KB)
Author Harnit Kang
Series IPCS Special Reports
Issue 76
Publisher Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS)
Copyright © 2009 Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS)
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