Cooperative development in the South China Sea : policies, obstacles, and prospects / edited by Huaigao Qi and Song Xue.

Contributor(s): Qi, Huaigao [editor.] | Xue, Song, 1987- [editor.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Publisher: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Description: 1 online resource (xii, 193 pages) : illustrations, mapsContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781000167429; 1000167429; 9781000167580; 1000167585; 9781003079972; 1003079970; 9781000167504; 100016750XSubject(s): Jurisdiction, Territorial -- South China Sea | International cooperation | Maritime law -- South China Sea | POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / GeneralDDC classification: 338.959 LOC classification: JC323 | .C67 2021Online resources: Taylor & Francis | OCLC metadata license agreement
Contents:
Introduction: Cooperative development among the South China Sea coastal states -- From joint cooperation to joint development in the South China Sea: incentives, challenges, and prospects for Brunei Darussalam -- China's incentives and policy choices on joint development in the South China Sea -- Indonesian views of managing disputes through cooperation in the South China Sea -- Prospects for Sino-Malaysian joint development in the South China Sea: lessons from Malaysia's experiences -- Philippines-China joint development agreement in the South China Sea under Duterte -- Vietnam's cooperative development in the South China Sea: existing cases and policy suggestions -- The US approach to joint development in the South China Sea -- Promoting business connectivity among industrial parks in the South China Sea rim and its vicinity -- Why joint development agreements fail: implications for the South China Sea dispute -- Conclusion: Bringing political calculations back in cooperative development in the South China Sea.
Summary: "Boundary disputes in the South China Sea have been a long-standing threat to peace and security in East and Southeast Asia. Without immediate definition of agreed boundaries, provisional arrangements to develop resources in the disputed area have become the encouraged and effective solution. Therefore, joint development between various countries has been developed as an ad-hoc arrangement to achieve a win-win situation. Incorporating insights from ten authors from six countries (Brunei, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam), this book provides a comprehensive analysis of the incentives and policies to joint development in the South China Sea disputes while the authors discuss the bottlenecks and proposed policy suggestions. The authors show that this process can demystify doubts over joint development in the South China Sea disputes, and shed light on creative ways to promote cooperation. The book is a key reference for students and scholars in politics and international relations, Asian Studies and maritime law"-- Provided by publisher.
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Introduction: Cooperative development among the South China Sea coastal states -- From joint cooperation to joint development in the South China Sea: incentives, challenges, and prospects for Brunei Darussalam -- China's incentives and policy choices on joint development in the South China Sea -- Indonesian views of managing disputes through cooperation in the South China Sea -- Prospects for Sino-Malaysian joint development in the South China Sea: lessons from Malaysia's experiences -- Philippines-China joint development agreement in the South China Sea under Duterte -- Vietnam's cooperative development in the South China Sea: existing cases and policy suggestions -- The US approach to joint development in the South China Sea -- Promoting business connectivity among industrial parks in the South China Sea rim and its vicinity -- Why joint development agreements fail: implications for the South China Sea dispute -- Conclusion: Bringing political calculations back in cooperative development in the South China Sea.

"Boundary disputes in the South China Sea have been a long-standing threat to peace and security in East and Southeast Asia. Without immediate definition of agreed boundaries, provisional arrangements to develop resources in the disputed area have become the encouraged and effective solution. Therefore, joint development between various countries has been developed as an ad-hoc arrangement to achieve a win-win situation. Incorporating insights from ten authors from six countries (Brunei, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam), this book provides a comprehensive analysis of the incentives and policies to joint development in the South China Sea disputes while the authors discuss the bottlenecks and proposed policy suggestions. The authors show that this process can demystify doubts over joint development in the South China Sea disputes, and shed light on creative ways to promote cooperation. The book is a key reference for students and scholars in politics and international relations, Asian Studies and maritime law"-- Provided by publisher.

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