ABSTRACT

This book provides an explanation of Chinese policy towards the South China Sea, and argues that this has been sculpted by the changing dynamics of the law of the sea in conjunction with regional geopolitical flux.

The past few decades have witnessed a bifurcated trend in China’s management of territorial disputes. Over the years, while China gradually calmed and settled most land-border disputes with its neighbors, disputes on the ocean frontier continued to simmer in a seething cauldron. China's Policy towards the South China Sea attributes the distinctive path of China’s approach to maritime disputes to a unique factor – the law of the sea (LOS) as the "rules of the road" in the ocean. By deconstructing the concept of "sovereignty" and treating the LOS as an evolving regime, the book examines how the changing dynamics of the LOS regime have complicated and reshaped the nature and content of sovereign disputes in the ocean regime as well as the options of settlement. Applying the findings to the South China Sea case, the author traces the learning curve on which China has embarked to comprehend the complexity of the dispute accordingly and finds that it is the dynamic interaction of the law of the sea regime and the geopolitical conditions that has driven the evolution of China’s South China Sea policy.

This book will be of great interest to students of Chinese and Asian politics, international law, international relations and security studies.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|14 pages

The pre-1971 period

The PRC’s initial claims in the SCS and its view of international regimes

chapter 3|19 pages

China in the UNCLOS III era

Where changes began

chapter 4|25 pages

The 1980s

Shaping a new game in the SCS

chapter 5|38 pages

A multilateral turn in the SCS

1990–2002

chapter 6|48 pages

The 2002–2013 period

Changes and continuities

chapter 8|15 pages

Conclusion