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Maritime Governance and South Asia: Trade, Security and Sustainable Development in the Indian Ocean PDF

270 Pages·2018·3.224 MB·English
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10937_9789813238220_tp.indd 1 27/2/18 3:02 PM b2530 International Strategic Relations and China’s National Security: World at the Crossroads TTTThhhhiiiissss ppppaaaaggggeeee iiiinnnntttteeeennnnttttiiiioooonnnnaaaallllllllyyyy lllleeeefffftttt bbbbllllaaaannnnkkkk b2530_FM.indd 6 01-Sep-16 11:03:06 AM 10937_9789813238220_tp.indd 2 27/2/18 3:02 PM Published by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. 5 Toh Tuck Link, Singapore 596224 USA office: 27 Warren Street, Suite 401-402, Hackensack, NJ 07601 UK office: 57 Shelton Street, Covent Garden, London WC2H 9HE Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Schöttli, Jivanta, editor. Title: Maritime governance and South Asia : trade, security and sustainable development in the Indian Ocean / editor, Jivanta Schöttli (NUS, Singapore). Description: New Jersey : World Scientific, [2018] | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2018001027 | ISBN 9789813238220 Subjects: LCSH: Indian Ocean Region--Foreign relations. | Indian Ocean Region-- Foreign economic relations. | Indian Ocean Region--Commerce. Classification: LCC DS341 .M374 2018 | DDC 355/.0330182/4--dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018001027 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Copyright © 2018 by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without written permission from the publisher. For photocopying of material in this volume, please pay a copying fee through the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. In this case permission to photocopy is not required from the publisher. For any available supplementary material, please visit http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/10937#t=suppl Desk Editor: Shreya Gopi Typeset by Stallion Press Email: [email protected] Printed in Singapore Shreya - 10937 - Maritime Governance and South Asia.indd 1 28-02-18 4:50:50 PM February 27,2018 16:46 MaritimeGovernanceandSouth Asia 9inx6in b3204-fm pagev Contents ForewordbyTommyKoh ix PrefaceandAcknowledgements xv ListofContributors xvii EditorialIntroductionbyJivantaSchöttli xxix Section I. Order 1 Chapter1 SecurityintheIndianOcean 3 ShivshankarMenon Chapter2 SriLanka’sRoleintheIndianOcean andChangingGlobalDynamics 13 HarshadeSilva Chapter3 ResolutionofMaritimeBoundaryDisputes amongBangladesh,MyanmarandIndia intheBayofBengal 23 Md.KhurshedAlam v February 27,2018 16:46 MaritimeGovernance andSouthAsia 9inx6in b3204-fm pagevi vi Contents Chapter4 MaritimeSafetyandSecurityandDevelopment ofthe BlueEconomyinthe IndianOceanRim Association(IORA) 35 K.V.Bhagirath Chapter5 DoesIndiaUseTradeEffectively? 53 FrankLavin Section II. Leadership 61 Chapter 6 India as a Net Security Provider in the Indian OceanRegion:TheStrategicApproach ofaResponsibleStakeholder 63 AbhayKumarSingh Chapter7 Indonesia’sMaritimeVisionintheIndian Ocean:NegotiatingNationalInterest andRegionalCommitment 79 AdrianaElisabeth Chapter8 TheUnitedStatesandtheIndianOcean:Power ShiftsandUncertainLeadership 99 DeepaM.Ollapally Section III. Institutions 115 Chapter 9 New Maritime Governance and Cooperation Arrangements in the Eastern Indian Ocean: ChallengesandProspects 117 DavidBrewster Chapter10 OrganizedAgainstOrganizedMaritime Crimes — The National Maritime Single Point ofContact 131 MartinA.SebastianRMN(R) February 27,2018 16:46 MaritimeGovernanceandSouth Asia 9inx6in b3204-fm pagevii Contents vii Chapter11 IORA,TheBlueEconomyandOcean Governance 141 V.N.Attri Chapter12 TheJakartaIORASummit: AWayAheadforaStableIndianOcean MaritimeOrder? 165 YogendraKumar Section IV. Prospects and Perspectives 179 Chapter13 TheIndianOceanandChina’sExpanding Influence: Prospects for Cooperation among theKeyAsianEnergyImporters 181 ChristopherLen Chapter14 GoverningtheOcean:PerspectivesfromTanzania 195 HoseanaBohelaLunogelo Chapter15 GoverningtheOcean:AnEUPerspective 213 MariannePéron-Doise Postscript 221 TheBlueEconomyBeckons 223 JamesAlixMichel Index 227 b2530 International Strategic Relations and China’s National Security: World at the Crossroads TTTThhhhiiiissss ppppaaaaggggeeee iiiinnnntttteeeennnnttttiiiioooonnnnaaaallllllllyyyy lllleeeefffftttt bbbbllllaaaannnnkkkk b2530_FM.indd 6 01-Sep-16 11:03:06 AM February 27,2018 16:46 MaritimeGovernance andSouthAsia 9inx6in b3204-fm pageix Foreword TommyKoh On 29 March 2016, I was asked to deliver the welcome remarks for a conference on “Maritime Governance in South Asia: The potential for Trade, Security and Sustainable Development”. The conference was organized by the Institute of South Asian Studies and I was happy to accept the invitation from Ambassador Gopinath Pillai, Chairman of ISAS and Professor Subrata Mitra, Director of ISAS. Among the par- ticipants were old friends including Ambassador Munshi Faiz Ahmad, the former High Commissioner of Bangladesh to Singapore; Professor Bob Carr, the former Foreign Minister of Australia; AmbassadorFrank Lavin,theformerUSAmbassadortoSingapore;andProfessorSDMuni. I began with a comment on the topic of “Maritime Governance in South Asia”. Present with us, was a colleague from Tanzania. Tanzania is not part of South Asia but it is certainly part of the Indian Ocean. AustraliaisalsonotpartofSouthAsia.Ithereforeproposedinterpreting “South Asia” liberally to mean the Indian Ocean and I am glad to see thatthebook,whichhasemergedfromtheconference,hastakenonthe suggestion to broadenmaritime governance in South Asia to the Indian Ocean.OurtopicinvitedustoexaminetheIndianOcean’spotentialfor trade,securityandsustainabledevelopment.Letmeturnfirsttotrade. ix

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