Power, Politics and Maritime Governance in the Indian Ocean Jivanta Schoettli
Material type: TextLanguage: Eng. Publication details: Routeldge 2015 New YorkEdition: 1st EdDescription: ix, 127p : illus ; 26 cmISBN:- 9780367739058
- 320.954 SCH
Item type | Current library | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | Rashtriya Raksha University | 320.954 SCH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | In transit from Rashtriya Raksha University to Rashtriya Raksha University since 02/02/2024 | 9651 |
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320.954 MIS The sovereign lives of India and Pakistan : Post-Partition statehood in South Asia | 320.954 OBE Government and Politics in South Asia | 320.954 SAI Restructuring South Asian Security | 320.954 SCH Power, Politics and Maritime Governance in the Indian Ocean | 320.954 SCO Power, Politics and Maritime Governance in the Indian Ocean | 320.954 SHA India & The United States : Politics of the Sixties | 320.954 SIV Indian Democracy |
The Indian Ocean is of tremendous geo-political and strategic relevance. More than eighty per cent of global seaborne trade in oil passes through the Ocean. Access to resources is under-regulated (fishing) or has yet to be conceived (deep sea bed mining) and security concerns such as piracy and the stability of strategically located states, are propelling countries to rethink naval capabilities and priorities. This applies to littoral countries as well as to extra-regional powers such as China, Japan, European countries and the United States, each of which is keenly interested in maintaining and securing open sea-lanes of communication. The revival in maritime concern is prompting new dynamics of competition and cooperation in a region that has historically been characterised by dense cultural, economic and political networks. The Indian Ocean is an extensive and expansive space where no one power has been able to hold sway. Hence, multilateralism and open regionalism are key contributors to stability, both in terms of military as well as commercial coordination. In this issue, scholars from Asia, Europe and the US examine institutions and examples of maritime governance within the Indian Ocean including security arrangements, evolving forms of alliance building and counter-balancing, policy planning and forecasting.
This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of the Indian Ocean Region.
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