Order, contestation and ontological security-seeking in the South China Sea

Author(s)

    • Heritage, Anisa
    • Lee, Pak K.

Bibliographic Information

Order, contestation and ontological security-seeking in the South China Sea

Anisa Heritage, Pak K. Lee

(Governance, security and development / series editor, Trine Flockhart)

Palgrave Macmillan, [2020]

  • : [hardback]

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

"This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG." -- T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book examines the South China Sea territorial disputes from the perspective of international order. The authors argue that both China and the US are attempting to impose their respective preferred orders to the region and that the observed disputes are due to the clash of two competing order-building projects. Ordering the maritime space is essential for these two countries to validate their national identities and to achieve ontological security. Because both are ontological security-seeking states, this imperative gives them little room for striking a grand bargain between them. The book focuses on how China and the US engage in practices and discourses that build, contest, and legitimise the two major ordering projects they promote in the region. It concludes that China must act in its legitimation strategy in accordance with contemporary publicly accepted norms and rules to create a legitimate maritime order, while the US should support ASEAN in devising a multilateral resolution of the disputes.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction2. Theoretical Framework: International Order-Building, Ontological Security and Legitimation3. American Construction of Regional Order in the Asia-Pacific, 1945-19554. Developments in Regional Maritime Order from the 1970s: UNCLOS and the US Principle of Freedom of Navigation5. China's Contestation of US Order-Building6. Regional Contestation of China's Order-Building Project7. Conclusions: A Sino-American Grand Bargain to Settle the Disputes?

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