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ID174074
Title ProperSino-American confrontation in the South China Sea
Other Title Informationinsights from an international order perspective
LanguageENG
AuthorLee, Pak K ;  Heritage, Anisa
Summary / Abstract (Note)Conventional accounts of the South China Sea territorial disputes identify China’s assertive behaviour as the primary cause of the rising tension since the early 2010s. This paper goes beyond this traditional interpretation of the disputes by arguing that the territorial disputes are an expression of the broader contestation between two order-building projects by China and the United States (US). China’s assertive behaviour originates in its desire to promote a ‘historical’ and ‘post-colonial’ maritime order that is premised on its Sino-centric historical narrative of the Sea and on its emphasis on the historical legitimacy of the regional order of 1943–1945. The US-led ‘liberal’ maritime order is underpinned by a post-war legal framework built on the San Francisco Peace Treaty and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and the notion and practice of freedom of navigation. Since October 2015 the US has enhanced its freedom of navigation operations to challenge China’s ‘excessive’ maritime or territorial claims. We conclude that as a result of the uneasy coexistence of these two order-building projects, which fundamentally disagree over the foundations of maritime order in the South China Sea, the disputes have reached an open-ended impasse.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 33, No.1; Feb 2020: p.134-156
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 33 No 1
Key WordsSouth China Sea ;  Sino-American Confrontation ;  International Order Perspective


 
 
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