LEADER 04193 am 2200829 n 450 001 9910279591503321 005 20180215 010 $a2-9564470-4-1 024 7 $a10.4000/books.irasec.457 035 $a(CKB)4100000004910769 035 $a(FrMaCLE)OB-irasec-457 035 $a(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/58353 035 $a(PPN)229999875 035 $a(EXLCZ)994100000004910769 100 $a20180703j|||||||| ||| 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $auu||||||m|||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 14$aThe Resurgence of Sea Piracy in Southeast Asia /$fÉric Frécon 210 $aBangkok $cInstitut de recherche sur l?Asie du Sud-Est contemporaine$d2018 215 $a1 online resource (131 p.) 330 $aEric Frécon's study starkly reveals the fragility of the internal societies and the inadequate regulation of the Asian region by boldly plunging into a reality- that of piracy- that during the Cold War had been habitually restricted to notes of secret agents or for the reports of some original journalists. The study is an interesting approach. The development of terrorism has in fact confirmed it: a major part of the current scenario which matters now is that of the underground, economic, mafia-like or terrorist forces, forces that are beyond control and of which sometimes the nations are fully aware. Piracy is therefore an important phenomenon today; its analysis allows us to measure the power of the nations and the regulation of international zones. But the investigation is difficult and calls for intelligence, passion, the audacity to search in the dark and the courage to not be taken in: these are the very qualities that this work embodies. This book constitutes an excellent photograph of the weaknesses but also of the recovery of the Asians. It explains how piracy reappeared massively after the Cold War, firstly on account of the general deficiencies of the region and the weaknesses (or tactics) of some nations. But it also shows that the region has evolved. When I brought it up in 1998 in ?L'Asie en danger?, piracy was partially imputable to the internal situation and to the foreign policy of China. Since then, the collapse of Indonesia and the recovery of the Chinese regime have pushed it back towards the Straits of Southeast Asia. Eric Frécon's book also describes how the efforts of regional coordination and the policies of certain big nations like Japan and India acted upon piracy, in order to contain it, on the whole. The problem seems to have, since then, been identified and to a large extent handled; one may hope that it will be resolved in the years to come, even though the Indonesian crisis may seriously impede regulation efforts. 606 $aAsian Studies 606 $aSoutheast Asia 606 $aterrorism 606 $asecurity 606 $atrafficking 606 $atrafic 606 $apiracy 606 $aMalay archipelago 606 $aterrorisme 606 $asécurité 606 $aMalaisie 606 $aAsean 606 $apiraterie 606 $aMalaysia 606 $aarchipel malais 606 $acooperation coopération 606 $aAsie du Sud-Est 610 $aMalay archipelago 610 $aSoutheast Asia 610 $asecurity 610 $apiracy 610 $aterrorism 610 $atrafic 610 $atrafficking 615 4$aAsian Studies 615 4$aSoutheast Asia 615 4$aterrorism 615 4$asecurity 615 4$atrafficking 615 4$atrafic 615 4$apiracy 615 4$aMalay archipelago 615 4$aterrorisme 615 4$asécurité 615 4$aMalaisie 615 4$aAsean 615 4$apiraterie 615 4$aMalaysia 615 4$aarchipel malais 615 4$acooperation coopération 615 4$aAsie du Sud-Est 700 $aFrécon$b Éric$0953383 701 $aDomenach$b Jean-Luc$0173537 801 0$bFR-FrMaCLE 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910279591503321 996 $aThe Resurgence of Sea Piracy in Southeast Asia$93032931 997 $aUNINA