1st Edition

Sea Power and the Asia-Pacific The Triumph of Neptune?

Edited By Geoffrey Till, Patrick Bratton Copyright 2012
    296 Pages
    by Routledge

    296 Pages
    by Routledge

    With particular focus on the Asia-Pacific region, this book examines the rise and fall of sea powers.

    In the Asia-Pacific region there has been significant expansion of sea-based economies together with burgeoning naval power. Many claim that these processes will transform the world’s future economic and security relationships. The book addresses the question of to what extent the notion of ‘Asia rising’ is reflected by and dependent on its developing sea power. A central theme is the Chinese challenge to long-term Western maritime ascendency and what might be the consequences of this.

    In order to situate current and future developments this book includes chapters which analyse what sea power means and has meant, as well as its role, both historic and contemporary, in the rise and fall of great powers.

    This book will be of much interest to students of naval power, Asian politics, strategic studies, war and conflict studies, IR and security studies.

    Preface  Abbreviations  Contributors  Chapter 1. Introduction : Seapower and the Rise and Fall of Empires  Chapter 2. The United States as a Pacific Power  Chapter 2. Maritime Power and the Asia Pacific: US Navy Perspectives  Chapter. 4 China: Its Maritime Traditions and Navy Today  Chapter 5 The Evolution of the PLA Navy: The Twin Missions of Area-Denial and Peacetime Operations  Chapter 6 Japan’s Maritime Past, Present and Future  Chapter 7. India’s Growing Naval Power: Indian Ocean in Focus  Chapter 8. Singapore and Seapower  Chapter 9. The Seapower and Navy of the Republic of Korea Present and Future  Chapter 10. Australia’s Maritime Past, Present and Future  Part II Transitions  Chapter 11. British Seapower and Imperial Defence in the Far East: Sharing the Seas with America  Chapter 12. The British Pacific Fleet and the Decline of Empire ?  Chapter 13 Conclusions: Transitions and Futures

    Biography

    Patrick C. Bratton is Assistant Professor of political science and Program Chair for Political Science and International Relations at the Hawaii pacific University, Honolulu.

    Geoffrey Till is the Director of the Corbett Centre for Maritime Policy Studies at King’s College London. He is the author of a number of books, including, most recently, The Development of British Naval Thinking (Routledge 2006), Globalization and the Defence in Asia (co-ed. with Emrys Chew and Joshua Ho, Routledge, 2008), and Seapower: A Guide for the 21st Century (2nd edn, Routledge 2009).

    "This is an important collection of detailed high-quality essays on the dynamics of various national and regional aspects of sea power which deserve serious scholarly attention." - Dennis Rumley, International Journal of Maritime History, Vol. 24, 1, June 2012