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E-raamat: Piracy in Southeast Asia: Trends, Hot Spots and Responses

Edited by (University of California, Santa Cruz, USA), Edited by (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, Germany)
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This book combines multi-disciplinary ethnographic and theoretical approaches to examine the re-emergence of piracy in Southeast Asia and the regional and international responses to this resurgent threat.

Since 2013, Southeast Asia is once again the region with the highest number of reported pirate attacks in the world. In 2014, 75 percent of global attacks occurred in Southeast Asian waters, including 12 successful hijackings. Data from the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) shows that concerns over piracy now extend beyond the Malacca and Singapore Straits, and areas of risk now reach deep into the South China Sea, around Borneo and into the waters of the Southern Philippines.

The primary aim of this volume is to examine how piracy has evolved in Southeast Asia over the past ten years, to evaluate efforts of maintaining security in regional waters, and to offer an analysis of what might be expected in the next decade. The piracy boom in this region in the early- to mid-2000s received substantial academic attention, but in recent years, the focus shifted to Somali piracy, and the resurgence of piracy in Southeast Asia was neglected. This volume seeks to remedy this gap in the literature; it will make a contribution to current academic discourses about piracy and maritime security governance and inform national, regional and international policy discussions concerning anti-piracy efforts. The contributors include academics, policy makers and military officers from Southeast Asia, the United States and Europe, and their contributions focus on three inter-related issues reflected in the structure of the volume: (1) the nature of piracy in geographical hot-spots; (2) phenomenological aspects of piracy, such as economic and legal concerns; and (3) regional and extra-regional (state) responses to piracy in Southeast Asia.

This book will be of much interest to students of maritime security, Asian politics, security studies and IR in general. 

Abbreviations vii
List of figures and tables
xi
Notes on contributors xii
1 Piracy in Southeast Asia: Trends, hot spots and responses
1(13)
Carolin Liss
2 Changes in piracy in Southeast Asia over the last ten years
14(18)
Sam Bateman
3 U.S. counter-piracy efforts in Southeast Asia 2004--2015: Consistent, cooperative and supportive
32(25)
John Bradford
4 Japan's response to piracy in Southeast Asia: Ten years on
57(21)
Lindsay Black
5 Legal measures to combat piracy and armed robbery in Southeast Asia: Problems and prospects
78(19)
Tara Davenport
6 Naval counter-piracy in Indonesia
97(23)
Ristian Atriandi Supriyanto
7 The professionalization of piracy: An ethnographic vignette from Southeast Asia's pirate haven
120(13)
Ted Biggs
8 Hijacking for product theft: Simple math and good business
133(18)
Karsten Von Hoesslin
9 Piracy and maritime violence in the waters between Sabah and the southern Philippines
151(17)
Carolin Liss
10 Conclusions
168(7)
Carolin Liss
Index 175
Carolin Liss is Research Fellow at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, Germany, and is author of Oceans of Crime: Maritime Piracy and Transnational Security in Southeast Asia and Bangladesh (2011).

Ted Biggs is a PhD candidate in socio-cultural anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, USA.