Abstract

Abstract. In addition to facilitating peaceful trade and economic development, sovereign territory, territorial waters and international waters are being used by various criminal groups that pose threats to governments, businesses and civilian population in Southeast Asia. Nonstate criminal maritime activities were not receiving appropriate attention as they were overshadowed by traditional military security challenges. Yet more and more frequently, the non-traditional actors challenge lines of communication, jeopardize access to strategic resources, complicate traditional defence tasks, and harm the environment. Understanding the nature of non-traditional threats, and the ways to combat them, requires international legal, historical and political science analysis within a united problem-oriented approach. A fair critique to pure interest, power and knowledge -based theories of regime formation was developed by E.K. Leonard’s1, who explained the evolution of the international system from the global governance perspective. The present study is based on the premise that pure nation-state approaches are incapable of providing a theoretical ground for addressing the growing influence of international criminal networks in South East Asia. From an international relations theory perspective, the author of this study agrees with D.Snidal2 that the hegemonic stability theory has "limits" and is insufficient in describing modern challenges to sustainable international security regime, including non-traditional threats, where collective action is more efficient from an interest and capability standpoint. At the same time the author of this study does not share the viewpoint on "marginalization"3 of international law in current international order due to its fragmentation and regionalization4 and "global power shifts"5 . The United Nations, as a global institution at the top of the vertical hierarchy of international legal order, and the EU as an example of "self-contained" regime along with other subsystems like South East Asia may have different approaches to global governance, international constitutional order, or particular cases such as the measure of infringement of human rights when targeting individuals suspected of terrorist links. Yet international law remains the key part of the Asian and global security regime. The hypothesis of this study is that the "void of governance" regime in territorial and international waters provides lucrative environment for developing terrorism, piracy, environmental degradation, and other criminal activities that pose untraditional threats to the regional security. This "void of governance" regime can be caused by either, or both, de jure or de facto insufficient control over particular marine territories.

Highlights

  • In addition to facilitating peaceful trade and economic development, sovereign territory, territorial waters and international waters are being used by various criminal groups that pose threats to governments, businesses and civilian population in Southeast Asia

  • The total area of disputed Spratley islands themselves is less than 3 square miles, each small island allows the sovereign owner to claim the surrounding waters as an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) which under the UNCLOS7 extends to 200 nm from the coastline

  • The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XL-4/W3, 2013 ISPRS/IGU/ICA Joint Workshop on Borderlands Modelling and Understanding for Global Sustainability 2013, 5 – 6 December 2013, Beijing, China trading routs proved to be extremely vulnerable to such a threat as a blockade

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Summary

Boundaries disputes

Almost all South East Asian countries claim islands and waters in the sea. Those unestablished maritime boundaries is a serious challenge to stable and effective security regime. They create confusion in terms of rights of use and responsibilities to protect and can erupt in violence from the aggressive claimant or a third party, such as terrorists or pirates. Undefined boundaries between states inhibit stable legal regime of the use and protection of straits and waters around those islands. The countries in the South East region are not keen on delegating all the territorial disputes to the ICJ. The countries in the South East region are not keen on delegating all the territorial disputes to the ICJ. 8 Part of the reason is that that the ICJ has moved from pure geographic approach of defining borders to socio-geographic “proportionality” approach, which makes the results “pseudomathematical” and raise questions in terms of their rationality. The positive exclusions were Malaysia and Singapore memorandum to refer their dispute to the ICJ, which granted Pedra Blanca to Singapore, Middle Rocks to Malaysia, and South Ledge to whichever state in whose territorial waters it lies

Imbalance of inclusive and exclusive interests of states
SOCIO-POLITICAL ASPECTS OF “VOID OF GOVERNANCE” REGIME
Non-traditional threats
Non-traditional threats as a naval affair
Findings
RECOMMENDATIONS
Full Text
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