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ID148499
Title ProperDiscourses and institutions in China’s maritime disputes
LanguageENG
AuthorSummers, Tim
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines discourses around China’s maritime disputes. It adopts an English School approach to international order, making use of institutions governing relations between states which are themselves discursive in nature. The article argues that discourse is a particularly important factor in maritime disputes given the ambiguities resulting from historical and ongoing changes in conceptions of maritime space and sovereignty. Further, although these changes have led the institution of international law to play a growing role in questions of maritime sovereignty and jurisdiction, the article argues that the application of these legal frameworks is itself partly discursive and creates ambiguities which inform maritime disputes between key states in East Asia. The article then considers an example of discursive contestation by examining the use of freedom of navigation in the positions taken and practised by the United States and their role in US–China maritime dynamics. It concludes by suggesting that contested discourses around maritime disputes in East Asia are best understood as part of an ongoing and dynamic process of the renegotiation of regional and international order in East Asia.
`In' analytical NoteChina Information Vol. 30, No.3; Nov 2016: p.275-295
Journal SourceChina Information 2016-12 30, 3
Key WordsDiscourse ;  Freedom of Navigation ;  Maritime Sovereignty ;  East Asia Maritime Disputes ;  Regional And International Order