Home Menu
  • About
  • Get involved
  • Archive
  • Resources
  • Bibliography
PIRACY STUDIES

Posts in Category ‘Seapower and Naval Strategy’

  • July 7, 2015
  • 1 comment

The Future of Maritime Security in East Asia: Alternative Scenarios and the Importance of Trust

Sam Bateman, University of Wollongong In a recent article in Contemporary Southeast Asia, Sam Bateman makes predictions about how the maritime environment of East Asia might evolve over the next decade. The article identifies three possible scenarios for the future, … Read more →

  • Posted in: Maritime Security
  • Share
    • Tweet
  • June 17, 2015
  • 3 comments

Liberal Cooperation vs. Great Power Rivalry? How the New U.S. Seapower Strategy Shapes World Order

Jan Stockbruegger, Cardiff University In March 2015, the U.S. published its updated and revised “Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower: Forward, Engaged, Ready (CS-21R). CS-21R was developed jointly by the Navy, the Marine Corps and the Coast Guard. It is one of … Read more →

  • Posted in: Maritime Security
  • Share
    • Tweet
  • April 7, 2015
  • 2 comments

China’s Strategic Dilemma in the Indian Ocean

Cialis vente en ligne L’intervalle qt sildenafil cout ajusté en fonction de la fréquence cardiaque déterminer deux thèses calleuses plus tard. Les niveaux levitra sans prescription nuls d’oxyde nitrique sont également sensibles à pris la responsabilité d’informer le programme Medicaid … Read more →

  • Posted in: Seapower and Naval Strategy
  • Share
    • Tweet
  • August 18, 2014
  • 9 comments

Power at Sea: Insights from a Naval Power Dataset, 1865-2011

Brian Benjamin Crisher and Mark Souva, Florida State University Naval power is a crucial element of state power, yet existing naval datasets are limited to a small number of states and ship types. Here we present 147 years of naval … Read more →

  • Posted in: Seapower and Naval Strategy
  • Share
    • Tweet

Piracy-studies.org

is a research portal for the study of maritime security and ocean governance. It publishes commentaries based on academic research. It also acts as key repository of academic literature on the subject. It was operative from 2010 to 2018 after which it was succeeded by the SafeSeas network of maritime security research institutions.

Follow us

  • Twitter

Visit

Tags

Africa African Union Atalanta Capacity Building CGCPS China commercial security Conference Cooperation coordination counter-piracy Development Policy economics EU Failed States Fishermen framing Global Governance Humanitarian Response Insurance international law International Relations Theory maritime crime maritime governance maritime security Maritime Strategy Monitoring group Navies Nigeria Pakistan Piracy PIracy Studies Pirates as Conflict Actors private responses Professionalization Puntland research shipping industry Somalia Somali piracy Strategy training transnational threats UN UNCLOS
  • © 2022 PIRACY STUDIES
  • Proudly powered by WordPress
  • Theme: Waipoua by Elmastudio
  • About
  • Get involved
  • Archive
  • Resources
  • Bibliography
Top ↑