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Hasil Pencarian

Ditemukan 4219 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
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"The regime of navigations for the straits of Mallaca (and Singapore) would be the regime of "Transit passage" as stipulated in Part III of the 1982 UNCLOS...."
DIPLU 1(1-2)2009
Artikel Jurnal  Universitas Indonesia Library
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"The regime of navigations for the straits of Malacca (and Singapore) would be the regime of "transit passage" as stipulated in part III of the 1982 UNCLOS this regime of navigations does not apply to the various geographical straits in Indonesian archipelago which are..."
DIPLU 1:1 (2009)
Artikel Jurnal  Universitas Indonesia Library
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"As a sea passage, the Malacca straits and Singapore Straits are very important to international shipping because it provides the shortest sea raoute between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean...."
Artikel Jurnal  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Shaw, K.E.
Singapore: University Education Press, 1973
341.29 SHA s
Buku Teks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Leifer, Michael
Alphen aan den Rijn: Sijthoff and Noordhoff, 1978
341.446 LEI i
Buku Teks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Caminos, Hugo
Cambridge, UK: United Kingdom Cambridge University Press, 2014
341.446 CAM l
Buku Teks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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"Since the 1990s, regional organizations of the United Nations and international financial institutions have adopted a new dynamic of transnational integration, within the framework of the regionalization process of globalization."
Singapore: Institute of South East Asia Studies, 2014
e20442297
eBooks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Andi Meganingratna
"ABSTRAK
Penelitian ini menggambarkan tentang efektivitas kerjasama yang dibentuk oleh
Indonesia, Malaysia dan Singapura di dalam pengamanan selat Malaka setelah
terjadinya peristiwa 11 September 2001 hingga tahun 2010 yang telah mengubah
ancaman dan tantangan keamanan di kawasan ini. Penelitian ini merupakan
penelitian yang bersifat kuantitatif dengan data sekunder. Hasil penelitian
menyimpulkan bahwa efektivitas kerjasama yang dibentuk oleh littoral states
dalam pengamanan selat Malaka ini sangat di pengaruhi oleh banyak alasan
sehingga bentuk bentuk kerjasama di Asia tenggara antara littoral states terbatas
bahkan hingga pasca peristiwa 11 September 2001. Secara historis perompakan
dan terorisme maritim memang bukan merupakan masalah yang dianggap
penting. Akibatnya ada keengganan untuk bekerjasama pada isu tersebut. Adanya
peristiwa 11 September 2001 dan beberapa kejadian lain yang berhubungan
dengan terorisme akhirnya membuat littoral states mengubah persepsinya pada
berbagai masalah yang sebelumnya diyakini bukan sebagai ancaman pada masa
lalu. sehingga sangat penting untuk menginterpretasikan kerjasama keamanan
maritim secara lebih luas sehingga diharapkan dapat menjawab tantangan dan
dinamisme perkembangan maritim dalam batas teritorial setiap negara

Abstract
This study illustrates the effectiveness of cooperation established by Indonesia,
Malaysia and Singapore in the Malacca Strait security after the event of 11
September 2001 that have changed the threats and security challenge in the
region. This research is a quantitative study with secondary data. Study concluded
that the effectiveness of cooperation established by littoral states in securing the
Malacca strait is influenced by many reasons, so the form of cooperation in
Southeast Asia between the littoral states is limited even after the events of
11 September 2001. Historically piracy and maritime terrorism is not
an issue that is important. As a result there is a reluctance to cooperate on the
issue. The existence of the event of 11 September 2001
and some other events related to terrorism ultimately make littoral states to
change their perception on various issues that were previously believed to be not
as a threat in the past. So it is important to interpret maritime security
cooperation more broadly so that is expected to meet the challenges and
dynamism in the development of maritime territorial limits of each country.

Abstract
This study illustrates the effectiveness of cooperation established by Indonesia,
Malaysia and Singapore in the Malacca Strait security after the event of 11
September 2001 that have changed the threats and security challenge in the
region. This research is a quantitative study with secondary data. Study concluded
that the effectiveness of cooperation established by littoral states in securing the
Malacca strait is influenced by many reasons, so the form of cooperation in
Southeast Asia between the littoral states is limited even after the events of
11 September 2001. Historically piracy and maritime terrorism is not
an issue that is important. As a result there is a reluctance to cooperate on the
issue. The existence of the event of 11 September 2001
and some other events related to terrorism ultimately make littoral states to
change their perception on various issues that were previously believed to be not
as a threat in the past. So it is important to interpret maritime security
cooperation more broadly so that is expected to meet the challenges and
dynamism in the development of maritime territorial limits of each country."
2012
T30452
UI - Tesis Open  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Vacca, John R.
"Managing information security offers focused coverage of how to protect mission critical systems, and how to deploy security management systems, IT security, ID management, intrusion detection and prevention systems, computer forensics, network forensics, firewalls, penetration testing, vulnerability assessment, and more. It offers in-depth coverage of the current technology and practice as it relates to information security management solutions."
Waltham, MA: Syngress, 2014
e20427185
eBooks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Kandil, Hazem
"This book explores the genesis and structure of the coup-installed regimes in Iran, Turkey, and Egypt, with particular emphasis on the interactions between the three ruling institutions across several decades: military, security, and politics. It analyzes the revolutions from above in these three countries and the trajectories of their respective regimes: Iran became an absolutist monarchy that was overthrown from below; Turkey developed a limited democracy; and Egypt evolved into a police state. This divergence, the book argues, was determined by the power struggle within the ruling bloc between the military, security, and political institutions-what it calls the power triangle. The discussion is organized in three parts. Part I examines how the Iranian regime was transformed into an absolutist monarchy, Part II highlights the limits of military guardianship in Turkey, and Part III considers the politics of repression in Egypt and especially how power relations between the country's military, security, and political institutions influenced the way they direct the regime one way or another."
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016
e20470328
eBooks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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