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SEA CONFLICTS (3) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   128281


China, Vietnam, and the South China Sea: disputes and dispute management / Amer, Ramses   Journal Article
Amer, Ramses Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article examines recent developments in the South China Sea; in particular, the China-Vietnam relationship. The developments are presented in the broader context of the Sino-Vietnamese approach to managing border disputes since full normalization of relations in late 1991. The challenges for China and Vietnam in managing their disputes and related tension in the South China Sea are also discussed.
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2
ID:   128282


Rejection of a theoretical beauty: the foot of the continental slope in maritime boundary delimitations beyond 200 nautical miles / Magnússon, Bjarni Már   Journal Article
Magnússon, Bjarni Már Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article addresses maritime boundary delimitation concerning the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles. The focal point is how the foot of the continental slope can be used as the point of departure in drawing the provisional equidistance line in outer continental shelf boundary delimitations between neighboring states. The article examines the strength and weaknesses of this approach and asks whether the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea indirectly rejected this approach in the 2012 Bangladesh v. Myanmar Case.
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3
ID:   128331


Troubled waters: China and Japan face off at sea / Yoshihara, Toshi   Journal Article
Yoshihara, Toshi Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Japan and China have been staring each other down in the East China Sea for well over a year now. Since Tokyo nationalized the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands in September 2012, Chinese "maritime law enforcement flotillas" have been making the rounds in the disputed waters near the islands. China insists that the regular patrols are routine and normal. Japanese Coast Guard vessels have been working overtime to monitor and trail every Chinese intrusion, lest Tokyo concede Beijing's jurisdictional claims. Before this so-far low-decibel crisis began, it seemed unlikely that China would be willing to contest Tokyo's sovereignty over the uninhabited islands-islets is actually a better term to describe them-and administrative control over surrounding waters for as long as it has. And even fewer thought that Japan would be straining for an appropriate response. It is a testament to changing assumptions about China's growing ambitions that this protracted test of wills has gone largely unreported in the Western press. This cat-and-mouse game has seemingly become the new normal in maritime Asia.
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