This volume is designed to be a practical, yet critical, introduction to the main maritime and territorial disputes in the Indo-Pacific region. It covers the most controversial disputes, including those in the South China Sea, the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, Dokdo/Takeshima, the Kuril Islands, Taiwan, and Sino-India border issues. In addition, the role of the key actors in the region is examined, offering various perspectives on the disputes along with the basic rationales behind claimant nations’ diplomatic approaches. With a team of contributors made up of both senior and early-career scholars, diplomats, and legal specialists, the book provides a wide range of insights that go beyond what is provided in the media.
Asian Territorial and Maritime Disputes: A Critical Introduction
Table of contents
The book can be downloaded in full via the PDF icon (see above). You can also read each chapter’s web version online (see below).
Introduction – Moises de Souza, Dean Karalekas and Gregory Coutaz
The Role of United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) in the South China Sea Disputes: The Challenges to Conflict Resolution – Gleice Miranda and Valentina Maljak
The Role of ASEAN in the South China Sea Disputes – Leticia Simões
Understanding the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands Dispute: Diplomatic, Legal, and Strategic Contexts – Yoichiro Sato and Astha Chadha
China’s Strategic Thinking on the Diaoyu/Senkaku Island Dispute – Duan Xiaolin
The Dokdo and Kuril Islands: Japan’s Twin Disputes – Serafettin Yilmaz
US Policy in the South China Sea Across Three Administrations: Pivot, Transactionalism, and Strength Through Alliances – Adam Gerval and Mark Henderson
Assessing Neutrality: The United States’ Role in the Diaoyu Islands Dispute – Alana Camoça Gonçalves de Oliveira
Dashing Lines and Faking History: The Complicated History of Taipei’s Maritime Claims – Dean Karalekas
Sino-Indian Border Dispute: A Brief Introduction – Mayuri Banerjee
Understanding China’s ‘New’ Assertiveness from Resolved Territorial Questions – Bhaso Ndzendze
About the editors
Moises de Souza obtained his PhD from the International Doctoral Program in Asia-Pacific Studies (IDAS) at Taiwan’s National Chengchi University. Currently, he is Lecturer in Asia Pacific Studies at the School of Humanities, Language and Global Studies and Chair of the Northern England Policy Centre for the Asia Pacific (NEPCAP) at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan). He is also Researcher in Asia Studies at the International Relations Research Centre of the University of São Paulo (NUPRI-GEASIA) and deputy-director of the South China Sea Think Tank (SCSSTT). Additionally, he is also Asia Pacific Viewpoint Journal Editor-in-Chief (SCCI).
Gregory Coutaz is a Swiss political scientist. He holds an MA in Political Science from the University of Lausanne and a MAS in Asian Studies from the University of Geneva. Living in Taiwan since 2008, he received his PhD from the National Chengchi University and currently works as an Assistant Professor at the Department of Diplomacy and International Relations at Tamkang University. His major areas of research include comparative politics, conflict resolution, and non-traditional security. He is the author of Coping with Disaster Risk Management in Northeast Asia (2018).
Dean Karalekas is a research fellow at the Centre of Austronesian Studies at the University of Central Lancashire, having earned his PhD from the International Doctoral Program in Asia-Pacific Studies at Taiwan’s National Chengchi University. He is the author of The Men in No Man’s Land: A Journey into Bir Tawil and Civil-Military Relations in Taiwan: Identity and Transformation. He is also an ethnographic and narrative filmmaker, having produced, written and directed several award-winning films on a diversity of subjects, from the Canadian experience in World War II to indigenous mythology.