Law of the S.E.A.
U.S. accession and ratification would result in isolation and a decline in future cooperation with those remaining maritime countries that have maintained disputes over UNCLOS and chose not to accept...
View ArticleScarborough Fair
While no longer making regular headlines, the stand-off over the Scarborough Shoal/Panatag Shoal/Huangyan Island continues. Since April 10th both China and the Philippines have maintained a presence in...
View ArticleWho Would Benefit Most from Seasteading?
At its core, seasteading is designed as an alternative to existing nation-states. Its proponents understand, however, that for the foreseeable future seasteading must operate within existing legal...
View ArticleSea-Based Nations and Sovereignty: What Makes a Nation-state?
To me, one of the more interesting assertions made by Randy Henrickson in his CIMSEC interview was this: “To avoid legally being a pirate, seasteads will have to flag themselves with the flag of an...
View ArticleWrapping Up Sea-based Nation Week
I started out the week with a few of my own thoughts and an interview with Randy Hencken, Executive Director of the Seasteading Institute, who was gracious enough to reach out and participate in our...
View ArticleMFP 9: Final Predictions For The Future
Any final predictions? This is the ninth and final regular post in our Maritime Futures Project. For more information on the contributors, click here. Note: The opinions and views expressed in these...
View ArticleNATO in the Arctic?
By Andrew Chisholm Canada’s recent assumption of the Chairmanship of the Arctic Council prompted much discussion of Arctic issues, including security, an important element of which is the ongoing...
View ArticleTribunal Selected in Philippines Case Against China
The Philippines case against China's maritime claims is moving forward. The Philippines on Jan. 22nd asked the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS), to declare invalid China's claims...
View ArticleChoosing Sides or Choosing Peace? U.S. Strategy in the South China Sea Dispute
The National Interest on Monday published an intriguing article by Ted Galen Carpenter discussing the potential implications of President Obama’s current South China Sea (SCS) strategy. During the...
View ArticleNotes From the North: Canada and Russia Bolster their Arctic Ambitions
With a cold chill blowing through DC, it seems fitting to note several recent Arctic developments.
View ArticleThe “Mighty Moo” Maneuvers Around Trouble
The recent near-collision of a PLA Navy tank landing ship and the missile-guided cruiser USS Cowpens in the South China Sea represents yet another incident in a long line of instances of Chinese...
View ArticleChina’s Nine-Dashed Line Faces Renewed Assault
China’s ambiguous claim to the South China Sea, approximately demarcated by a series of hash marks known as the “nine-dashed line,” faced objections from an expanding number of parties over the past...
View ArticleToward a Harmonious Pacific through China-led, Confucian-based Maritime Law
What goals should the United States seek in the South China Sea? Trying to preserve the status quo – hoping that each country be ever content with its historic resources and territory – is simply...
View ArticlePiracy 2.0 : The Net-Centric Evolution
Network-Centric Warfare derives its power from the strong networking of a well-informed but geographically dispersed force. – VADM Arthur Cebrowski, Proceedings 1998 Almost twenty years ago the pages...
View ArticleChanging EEZs
An interesting discussion took place in the Boston Globe about how to deal with potential changes in the world’s Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) as rising sea levels change the shape of land areas,...
View ArticleGibraltar: Legal Advice on Innocent Passage
CIMSEC content is and always will be free; consider a voluntary monthly donation to offset our operational costs. As always, it is your support and patronage that have allowed us to build this...
View ArticleThe Nine Ironies of the South China Sea Mess
This article by Dr. James Kraska was originally published at The Diplomat. It is republished here with the author’s permission. Since 2009, when China asked the secretary-general of the United Nations...
View ArticleSouth China Sea: International Arbitration moves forward as PAC rules on...
By Alex Calvo Introduction: the Philippines’ International Arbitration Case moves Forward Despite Beijing’s refusal to take part in the proceedings, on 29 October the Court of Permanent Arbitration...
View ArticleRussia in the Arctic: aggressive or cooperative?
Russia Resurgent Topic Week By Laguerre Corentin Since the early 2000s, Russia has begun to pay more attention to the Arctic when its general socioeconomic situation had improved.1 With the ice...
View ArticleYours, Mine, and Moscow’s: Breaking Down Russia’s Latest Arctic Claims
This article originally featured on CIMSEC on August 25, 2015, and has been updated for inclusion into the Russia Resurgent Topic Week. By Sally DeBoer On August 4th, the Russian Federation’s Foreign...
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