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Many of the maritime disputes today represent a competing interest of two groups: coastal states and user states. This edited volume evaluates the role of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) in managing maritime order in East Asia after its ratification in 1994, while reflecting upon various interpretations of UNCLOS. Providing an overview of the key maritime disputes occurring in the Asia Pacific, it examines case studies from a selection of representative countries to consider how these conflicts of interest reflect their respective national interests, and the wider issues that these interpretations have created in relation to navigation regimes, maritime entitlement, boundary delimitation and dispute settlement.
Gordon Houlden is the Director of the China Institute, Professor of Political Science and Adjunct Professor of the Alberta School of Business at the University of Alberta.Nong Hong heads the Institute for China-America Studies (ICAS). She is a research fellow with China Institute, University of Alberta, the National Institute for South China Sea Studies and the China Center for Collaborated Studies on the South China Sea, Nanjing University.
Introduction Part I Regional Maritime Order Overview1. China-ASEAN Relations in the South China Sea: Persistent Patterns and Obstacles to Cooperation2. The East China Sea: Sea of Regional and Global ConfrontationPart II National Perspective3. Historic Concepts Vs. Contemporary Maritime Regimes in UNCLOS: China’s Claims in the South China Sea4. Navigational Rights, Freedoms, and Interests in the South China Sea: The Philippines’ Perspective5. Indonesia: An Archipelagic State's Perspectives on the Law of the Sea6. Balancing the Rights of Coastal States and User States in the Post-UNCLOS Age: Vietnam and Navigational Rights7. The United States and Accession to UNCLOS: A Case of How Domestic Political Polarization Results in Free RidershipPart III Navigation Related Issues and UNCLOS8. Freedom of Navigation and the UNCLOS Order9. The Prior Notification Issue of Military Activities in EEZ 10. Maritime Confidence Building Measures: Assessing China-US MOU on Notification of Major Military Activities and Rules of BehaviorPart IV Maritime Entitlement, Delimitation and Dispute Settlement and UNCLOS11. The Sino-Philippine Arbitration on the South China Sea Disputes: A Preliminary Assessment of the Merits Award12. Archipelagos and Archipelagic Regimes in the Law of the Sea 13. Low-tide Elevations: A Contemporary Analysis 14. Resolving Disputes under UNCLOS when the Coastal and User States are Disputed