破坏印度-太平洋海上安全的犯罪威胁:国际法能否建立弹性?

Jade Lindley
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引用次数: 5

摘要

印度-太平洋地区的海上安全不仅对周边国家具有战略重要性,而且对那些对该地区的良好治理感兴趣的国家也具有战略重要性,以支持安全通行和自然资源开采。腐败和潜在的恐怖主义助长了海盗和非法捕鱼等犯罪威胁,破坏了地区海上安全,因此,各国有动力合作应对,以确保地区安全。根据破窗犯罪理论,含蓄地支持该地区犯罪威胁的继续,可能会使现有的犯罪活动激增。由于印度-太平洋地区的法律和政治框架和利益各不相同,在应对区域海上犯罪威胁方面实现合作与协调可能具有挑战性。因此,为了应对破坏海上安全的犯罪威胁,本文认为,从犯罪学的角度来看,通过现有的国际法使各国保持一致,可以实现合作的区域反应。事实上,鉴于该地区普遍存在的腐败现象,可能会造成严重的犯罪威胁,通过现有的反腐败架构进行协调可能是一个合适的平台。
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Criminal Threats Undermining Indo-Pacific Maritime Security: Can International Law Build Resilience?
Maritime security in the Indo-Pacific region is strategically important to not only the surrounding states, but also those with an interest in its good governance, to support safe passage and natural resources extraction. Criminal threats, such as maritime piracy and illegal fishing, enabled by corruption and the potential for terrorism, undermine regional maritime security and therefore, there is incentive for states to respond cooperatively to secure the region. Drawing on broken windows crime theory, implicitly supporting the continuation of criminal threats within the region may enables exiting crimes to proliferate. With varying legal and political frameworks and interests across the Indo-Pacific region, achieving cooperation and harmonisation in response to regional maritime-based criminal threats can be challenging. As such, to respond to criminal threats that undermine maritime security, this article argues that from a criminological perspective, aligning states through existing international law enables cooperative regional responses. Indeed, given the prevalence of corruption within the region enabling serious criminal threats, harmonising through existing counter-corruption architecture may be a suitable platform to build from.
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