ABSTRACT

This volume examines the South China Sea’s regional security dynamics, highlighting the challenges and opportunities for both littoral and non-littoral states.

The South China Sea is a vital pathway for the great container ships and tankers, as well as for the naval vessels of today. Indeed, the security of the contemporary global economy is reliant more than ever upon the dependability of freedom of navigation through the waters of the South China Sea. This volume concentrates on the security of the South China Sea sub-region. It is designed to help illuminate the contemporary security dynamics within this important sub-region by highlighting its development, the contemporary challenges and opportunities confronting both the littoral states and the non-littoral powers that are active in the sub-region, and the policy responses of those states as they seek to defend and promote their national interests. This book is composed of 16 chapters and is organized into five thematic sections. Part I of the book is designed to set the historical context. Part II examines some of the contemporary challenges and opportunities that present themselves in the sub-region, while Part III focuses on Chinese policy in the South China Sea sub-region. Parts IV and Part V analyse and evaluate the contemporary policies of the various littoral and non-littoral powers that are active in the South China Sea sub-region. The collective analyses and assessments of the contemporary perceptions and policies of the various littoral and non-littoral powers active in the South China Sea in response to the traditional and non-traditional challenges within the sub-region that are examined in the chapters contained in Parts III, IV, and V, framed against the material presented in Parts I and II, provides the basis for observations concerning areas of conflicting and coinciding interests in the concluding chapter of the book.

This book will be of interest to students of the South China Sea, maritime security, Asian politics, and international relations.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|43 pages

Security Challenges and Power Configurations in the South China Sea Sub-Region

part 62II|83 pages

Contemporary Security Challenges and Opportunities in the South China Sea Sub-Region

part 146III|31 pages

Chinese Contemporary Perspectives, Interests, Challenges, Objectives, and Strategies in the South China Sea Sub-Region

chapter 1487|13 pages

China and the South China Sea

chapter 8|16 pages

The Status of Taiwan and Hong Kong

part 178IV|59 pages

Contemporary Perspectives, Interests, Challenges, Objectives, and Strategies of the South China Sea Littoral States

part 238V|110 pages

Contemporary Perspectives, Interests, Challenges, Objectives, and Strategies of Non-Littoral States Active in the South China Sea

chapter 13|22 pages

Japan and the South China Sea

chapter 14|17 pages

Australia and the South China Sea

chapter 15|23 pages

Russia and the South China Sea

chapter 16|18 pages

India and the South China Sea

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion