Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime

Southeast Asia and China are under the threat of a dramatic decline of the fish stocks, while halieutic resources provide most of the proteins for the littoral populations. In this context, illegal fishing is on the rise. This worrying trend raises the question of governance to address this concern,...

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Main Author: Eric Frécon
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2021-03-01
Series:VertigO
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/29783
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spelling doaj-544911d499484f418cb75f76488f12b12021-09-02T14:56:12ZfraÉditions en environnement VertigOVertigO1492-84422021-03-013310.4000/vertigo.29783Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritimeEric FréconSoutheast Asia and China are under the threat of a dramatic decline of the fish stocks, while halieutic resources provide most of the proteins for the littoral populations. In this context, illegal fishing is on the rise. This worrying trend raises the question of governance to address this concern, even if great and small powers are still in competition (territorial disputes, imposition of regional norms, etc.), at the local, regional and supra-regional levels. Two schools in International Relations offer paradigms to make sense and to untangle the issues. Realism highlights hidden interests beyond illegal fishing and focuses on powers, most of the time at a bilateral stage, like in Indonesia and China – echoing Buzan’s “securitisation”. However, because of the joint and bottom-up initiatives of multilateral and often non-state actors, specialised rather than generalist ones, a liberal approach based on cooperation is emerging step by step. It is time to proceed as new challenges could put at stake the people “human security” – as defined by the United nations in 1994.http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/29783Chinafisheriesgovernanceinternational relationsSoutheast Asia
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Frécon
spellingShingle Eric Frécon
Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
VertigO
China
fisheries
governance
international relations
Southeast Asia
author_facet Eric Frécon
author_sort Eric Frécon
title Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
title_short Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
title_full Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
title_fullStr Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
title_full_unstemmed Conflits halieutiques en mer de Chine du Sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
title_sort conflits halieutiques en mer de chine du sud : impacts sur la gouvernance maritime
publisher Éditions en environnement VertigO
series VertigO
issn 1492-8442
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Southeast Asia and China are under the threat of a dramatic decline of the fish stocks, while halieutic resources provide most of the proteins for the littoral populations. In this context, illegal fishing is on the rise. This worrying trend raises the question of governance to address this concern, even if great and small powers are still in competition (territorial disputes, imposition of regional norms, etc.), at the local, regional and supra-regional levels. Two schools in International Relations offer paradigms to make sense and to untangle the issues. Realism highlights hidden interests beyond illegal fishing and focuses on powers, most of the time at a bilateral stage, like in Indonesia and China – echoing Buzan’s “securitisation”. However, because of the joint and bottom-up initiatives of multilateral and often non-state actors, specialised rather than generalist ones, a liberal approach based on cooperation is emerging step by step. It is time to proceed as new challenges could put at stake the people “human security” – as defined by the United nations in 1994.
topic China
fisheries
governance
international relations
Southeast Asia
url http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/29783
work_keys_str_mv AT ericfrecon conflitshalieutiquesenmerdechinedusudimpactssurlagouvernancemaritime
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