PROGRAMME

 



Booklet of Conference (Click here) (including Programme, List of international and local participants, Bio of Role Players and Executive summaries of papers)

Photos of Conference (Click here)

DAY 1

Thursday - November 8, 2018

 

OPENING SESSION

 

·    Opening Remarks by Assoc. Prof. Nguyen Vu Tung, President of the Diplomatic Academy of Viet Nam

·      Welcome Remarks by Mr. Ho Ky Minh, Member of the Standing Board of Da Nang Municipal Communist Party Committee, Vice Chairman of Da Nang People's Committee

· Keynote Address by Lordship Kriangsak Kittichairasee, Judge, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS)

SESSION 1: South China Sea: Heart of Indo-Asia-Pacific Region

Moderator: Assoc. Prof Nguyen Vu Tung, President of the Diplomatic Academy of Viet Nam

 

The last decade witnessed the rise and confluence of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, which have a potential of transforming the 21st century's Asian and international politics. Lying as a link between the two oceans and the transiting point between the Eurasian landmass and the Indo-Pacific maritime theatre, the South China Sea has seemingly been a fault line of tectonic changes across the broader region. Against this backdrop, this session looks into the broader geopolitical arena of the Indo-Asia-Pacific region to trace down how significant the South China Sea is in competing geopolitical strategies. It also explores how South China Sea developments have interplayed with those in the East China Sea, Indian and Pacific Oceans and transformed regional geopolitical seascape.

South China Sea: Geopolitical Connectedness to the Indian Ocean

Capt. (Dr) Gurpreet S Khurana, Executive Director, National Maritime Foundation, India

Island Chain Defense and South China Sea (Click for Presentation)

Ms. Cleo Paskal, Associate Fellow, Energy, Environment and Resources Department and Asia-Pacific Programme, Chatham House, UK

South China Sea in the Indo-Pacific Concept (Click for Presentation)

Mr. Michael Shoebridge, Director of the Defence & Strategy Program, and Dr. Huong Le Thu, Senior Analyst, Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), Australia

Maritime Disputes in the East/South China Seas and Nationalism (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Lee Jaehyon, Director of the Centre for ASEAN and Oceania Studies, ASAN Institute for Policy Studies, South Korea

 

 

 

SESSION 2: South China Sea in Spotlight: 10-Year Recap

Moderator: Ms. Cleo Paskal, Associate Fellow, Energy, Environment and Resources Department and Asia-Pacific Programme, Chatham House

 

This session compares the state of affairs in South China Sea today with those ten years ago. It is designed to draw up endurances and changes on the ground, in the assessments of different governments, and in relations among claimants and powers concerned over related issues. It also examines different historiographies and narratives to chart out similarities and gaps in mentalities, perceptions, and interpretations, which then distorted realities and complicated the cycle of actions and reactions. Following ups and downs in the tension level, the panelists are required to identify major drivers behind those factual and mental changes.

China’s Long March at Sea: Explaining Beijing’s South China Sea Strategy from 2009 to 2016 (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Feng Zhang, Fellow, Department of International Relations, Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific, Australia National University

Obama, Trump, and the South China Sea: Navigating the Differences across Ten Years (Click for Presentation)

Mr. Conor Cronin, Research Associate, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, Centre for Strategic and International Studies, USA

The Ten-Year Crisis in the South China Sea and How to End It (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Stein Tønnesson, Research Professor, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Norway

ASEAN and the South China Sea over the Last 10 years: Perception and Policy Changes

Dr. Nguyen Hung Son, Head, Bien Dong Institute for Maritime Studies, Diplomatic Academy of Viet Nam, Viet Nam

 

 

 

SESSION 3: Evolving Claims and Positions over the South China Sea: Continuities and Changes 

Moderator: Prof. Robert Beckman, Head of Ocean Law and Policy Programme, Centre for International Law, the National University of Singapore, Singapore

 

The session provides an updated assessment of developments with regard to concerned claimants' positions and claims over the period in study. The panelists are required to dig in their respective countries' official statements and domestic legislatures to map out continuities and changes in their application and interpretation of the law of the sea. As usual, factors figuring significantly behind firmness or flexibility are central to understand countries' outlook and approach to the current oceanic legal order. The claimant's responses to the historic arbitral ruling of the case between the Philippines and China on July 12, 2017 are of particular interest as they provide food for thoughts on how rewarding legal actions would have effects on states' behavior.

China’s Claims and Positions over the South China Sea: Continuities and Adaptions (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Nong Hong, Executive Director & Senior Fellow, Institute for China - America Studies (ICAS), China

A Forked Road: Change and Continuity In Philippine Law And Policy On The South China Sea (Click for Presentation)

Prof. Jay Batongbacal, Director, Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, University of the Philippines, Philippines

Malaysia’s Claims and Positions over Maritime Features in the South China Sea (Click for Presentation)

Ms. Jalila bt. Abdul Jalil, Senior Researcher, Centre for the Straits of Malacca, Maritime Institute of Malaysia, Malaysia

Continuities and Evolution of Taiwan’s South China Sea Policy (Click for Presentation)

Assoc. Prof. Chi-ting Tsai, Department of Political Science, National Taiwan University, Chinese Taipei

Viet Nam’s Claims and Positions relating to the South China Sea as Developed in the last 10 Years (Click for Presentation)

Ms. Nguyen Thanh Ha, Vice Secretary-General of the Viet Nam Society of International Law, Viet Nam

 

 


SESSION 4: Major Powers: Engagements or Disengagements?

Moderator: Dr. Nong Hong, Executive Director & Senior Fellow, Institute for China - America Studies (ICAS), China

 

The South China Sea is a body of waters of global importance as it straddles important Sea Lines of Communication. There exists an argument that major powers' naval presence and activeness created insecurity and prompted regional militarization. The other genre of reasoning is that their involvements in regional affairs are attributed to anxieties about potential impediments to freedom of navigation and overflight as well as the existential challenge to the current legal. This session takes stock of shifts in major powers' positions over and policies toward the South China Sea and explores the dynamics of and rationality behind these changes.

Averting a Major-Power Cold War in the South China Sea

Dr. Patrick Cronin, Centre for a New American Security, USA 

Australia’s South China Sea Dilemma: From Multifaceted Interests To Rapidly Evolving Policy Approaches  (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Christopher Roberts, Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis, University of Canberra, Australia

Major Powers: Engagements or Disengagements? (Click for Presentation)

Mr. Bonji Ohara, Senior Fellow, International Peace and Security Department, Sasakawa Peace Foundation, Japan

European Powers and the South China Sea

Dr. Felix Heiduk, Senior Associate, Asia Division, German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Germany

Russia’s Policy Towards the South China Sea: Drivers and Limitations

Mr. Anton Tsvetov, Project Lead at the Center for Strategic Research, Russia

DAY 2

Friday – November 9, 2018

SESSION 5: Force Build-up in the South China Sea

Moderator: Prof. Carlyle Thayer, University of New South Wales at the Australian Defense Force Academy, Australia

 


This session is devoted to discuss shifts in the balance of power and measure the risks for armed clashes in the South China Sea. After a decade from Impeccable Incident in 2009, the sea is more congested by the deployment of greater number of naval and air assets, law enforcement ships, militia flotilla, and different types of autonomous mediums. The Spratlys and Paracels have been turned into fortresses with logistic centers, radar facilities and combatting platforms. The panelists are tasked with examining different maritime capability components to identify competitive edges among different rivals, their strategic thoughts and strategies, and the potentials of confrontations and conflicts.

Overview of Military Force Build Up in the South China Sea

Mr. Derek Grossman, Senior Defense Analyst, RAND Corporation, USA

Cooling Down the Spratly Disputes: Force Building Down and Confidence Building Up (Click for Presentation)

Prof. You Ji, Head of Department of Government and Public Administration, University of Macau, China

Force Build-up in the South China Sea: Will Grey-Zone Strategy Paint a Bright Future? (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Ha Anh Tuan, Assistant Director General, Diplomatic Academy of Viet Nam, Viet Nam

Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance in the South China Sea (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Swee Lean Colin Koh, Research Fellow, Maritime Security Programme, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

 

 

 


SESSION 6: Confidence Building, Preventive Diplomacy, and Dispute Resolution

Moderator: Mr. Robert Harris, Assistant Legal Adviser for East Asia and Pacific Affairs, United States Department of State

 

This panel is designed to review the progress in confidence building, preventive diplomacy, and dispute resolution efforts in the South China Sea. Despite simmering tensions over the last decade, some positive developments took place. After agreeing on the framework, ASEAN and China started substantive negotiation on the code of conduct since early 2018. The two sides already put in place hot lines for emergency and discussed the extension of the application of CUEs to the coast guard. Talks on joint development and maritime delimitation are also underway between different parties. Against this backdrop, panelists are tasked with taking stock of the most significant processes, probing the progress and stumbling blocks, and discussing their prospects.

From Confidence Building, Preventive Diplomacy and Dispute Resolution to the ASEAN-China South China Sea Code of Conduct (Click for Presentation)

Prof. Carlyle Thayer, University of New South Wales at the Australian Defense Force Academy, Australia

Crisis Management at Sea

Lieutenant General Nguyen Quang Dam, Former Commander of the Viet Nam Coast Guard, Viet Nam

The Next Step for the Philippines and China: Understanding the Hard Realities and Promising Possibilities of Joint Resource Development (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Jacqueline Joyce F. Espenilla, Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, University of the Philippines, Philippines

Confidence Building and Preventive Diplomacy in the South China Sea region

H.E. Ambassador Pou Sothirak, Executive Director of the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, Cambodia

 

 

SESSION 7: Emerging Disrupters to Maritime Order in the South China Sea


Moderator: Dr. Stein Tønnesson, Research Professor, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Norway

 

The session deals with newly arising problems that have the potential of disrupting the order in the South China Sea. Technological and scientific advancements have not only opened up new frontiers for competition, such as cyber space or deep-sea mining, but also blurred the boundary between civility and military and between man and nature. Climate change and marine environmental degradation caused by destructive human activities are also at the magnitude, which would pose significant disruptions to marine ecology with severe consequences to coastal communities and their economic activities. Denial and non-compliance may also activate reciprocal outlawed responses, which systematically crack legal order at sea. 

Competition over Fishing Resources

Dr. Shafiah Muhibat, Head of Department of International Relations, Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Indonesia

Force and Coercion in the South China Sea: Why does it matter in International Law? (Click for Presentation)

Dr. Constantinos Yiallourides, Arthur Watts Research Fellow on the International Law of Territorial Disputes at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, UK

Employment of Marine Unmanned Vehicles in the South China Sea (Click for Presentation)

Prof. Raul "Pete" Pedrozo, non-resident fellow, the Stockton Centre for the Study of International Law, US Naval War College, US

Non-compliance and Integrity of Maritime Legal Order  (Click for Presentation)

Prof. Robert Beckman, Head of Ocean Law and Policy Programme, Centre for International Law, the National University of Singapore, Singapore



SESSION 8: Order and Disorder in the SCS: Recap and Forward

Moderator: Moderator: H.E. Ambassador Le Cong Phung, Vice Chairman, The Foundation for East Sea Studies (FESS)

 

The rule-based order in the South China Sea is under serious challenge. It can be replaced by an order based on power hierarchy, or a kind of hybrid between right and might, or even disarray. Which type of order would bring greater security, prosperity and sustainability for the region? The session lays the ground for discussion on the nature of transformations in the last decade and on the prospect for peace and stability in the South China Sea in the decade to come. It is also tasked to draw lessons for improving management and regulation of the South China Sea for the sake of regional security and prosperity.

Prof. Carlyle Thayer, University of New South Wales at the Australian Defense Force Academy, Australia

Dr. Feng Zhang, Fellow, Department of International Relations, Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, College of Asia and the Pacific,  Australia National University

Prof. Jay Batongbacal, Director, Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, University of the Philippines, Philippines

Prof. Robert Beckman, Head of Ocean Law and Policy Programme, Centre for International Law, the National University of Singapore, Singapore

Dr. Do Thanh Hai, Assistant Director General, Diplomatic Academy of Viet Nam, Viet Nam

 Closing Remarks

Assoc. Prof. Nguyen Vu Tung, President, Diplomatic Academy of Viet Nam