For over seventy years, China has steadfastly asserted its sovereignty over the South China Sea, transforming these waters into a flashpoint of international tension and a focal point of global diplomacy. The Future of the South China Sea intricately explores China's motivations, unveiling its ambitions in the South China Sea that are anything but static. Despite the prevailing narrative that frames China's objectives as monolithic and unchanging, its underlying interests in the region have fluctuated in both content and urgency, driven by economic imperatives, historical legacies, domestic pressures, and broader international security concerns.
By incorporating negotiation records, such as the 1958 Declaration on China's Territorial Sea, the 1992 ASEAN Declaration, and the 2005 Tripartite Agreement, Jiye Kim traces how China reshapes its interests into negotiation agendas, providing critical insights into the nation's diplomacy and making a significant contribution to an existing literature on the South China Sea that has been largely dominated by analyses of great power rivalry. This book sheds light on China's underlying interests as living and adaptable entities, providing scholars with a detailed, evidence-based understanding of the complexities that define one of the world's most contested maritime regions.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Illustrationen
3 maps, 1 figure, 15 tables
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-472-07778-6 (9780472077786)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Jiye Kim is Assistant Professor of International Security at the University of Queensland and a researcher affiliated with the University of Sydney in Australia.
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
1. China's South China Sea Diplomacy: A Negotiation Perspective
2. History, Tradition, and Principles
3. Evolving Underlying Interests
4. Diplomacy: Bilateral, Trilateral, and Multilateral
5. Norms and Power: Why China Joined UNCLOS
6. The Traces of Negotiations
Bibliography
Index