Global Maritime Security Explained — Timothy Edmunds episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 26, 2025 · 1H 11M

Global Maritime Security Explained — Timothy Edmunds

from The IR thinker

This episode of The IR thinker explores the changing landscape of maritime piracy and security with Professor Tim Edmunds, tracing how piracy has evolved from traditional coastal raiding to more organised, networked forms of criminality at sea. The conversation examines the structure and scale of pirate groups, the onshore political and economic conditions that sustain them, and the mixed record of international anti-piracy measures. It then turns to wider challenges for the global maritime order, including “grey-zone” tactics at sea, strategic competition around chokepoints and artificial islands, debates over updating UNCLOS, and growing vulnerabilities linked to critical undersea infrastructure, highlighting some of the most pressing and under-researched questions in contemporary maritime security.Timothy EdmundsProfessor Timothy Edmunds is Professor of International Security and Head of the School of Sociology, Politics, and International Studies at the University of Bristol. A leading specialist in security policy, capacity building and security sector reform with a particular focus on the maritime domain, he is co-director of the SafeSeas Network and has played an advisory role in UK policy processes, including work on the 2022 UK National Strategy for Maritime Security. His research on maritime security has been supported by the UK Economic and Social Research Council, the British Academy and the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme, and he previously served as founding Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of International Security for Cambridge University Press and BISA.Publications:Understanding maritime securitySecuring the Seas: A Comprehensive Assessment of Global Maritime SecurityPragmatic ordering: Informality, experimentation, and the maritime security agendaInnovation and New Strategic ChoicesBlue crime: Conceptualising transnational organised crime at seaBeyond seablindness: a new agenda for maritime security studiesContent00:00 - Introduction02:10 - Evolution of Maritime Piracy10:11 - Organization of Pirate Groups13:27 - Structural Conditions Fuelling Piracy20:16 - Size and Scale of Piracy Groups24:08 - Effectiveness of Anti-Piracy Measures31:04 - Defining Assertiveness in Maritime Spaces36:33 - Grey-Zone Tactics at Sea43:50 - Innovating UNCLOS for Maritime Order53:05 - Maritime Chokepoints: Ownership and Control59:25 - Artificial Islands and Maritime Security01:01:43 - Threats to Undersea Infrastructure01:07:02 - Most Challenging Areas in Maritime Security ResearchFollow & Further ResourcesSubstack: https://theirthinker.substack.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ir-thinker/X: https://x.com/irthinker_Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theirthinker/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/theirthinker.bsky.socialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/irthinkerfb Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

This episode of The IR thinker explores the changing landscape of maritime piracy and security with Professor Tim Edmunds, tracing how piracy has evolved from traditional coastal raiding to more organised, networked forms of criminality at sea. The conversation examines the structure and scale of pirate groups, the onshore political and economic conditions that sustain them, and the mixed record of international anti-piracy measures. It then turns to wider challenges for the global maritime order, including “grey-zone” tactics at sea, strategic competition around chokepoints and artificial islands, debates over updating UNCLOS, and growing vulnerabilities linked to critical undersea infrastructure, highlighting some of the most pressing and under-researched questions in contemporary maritime security.Timothy EdmundsProfessor Timothy Edmunds is Professor of International Security and Head of the School of Sociology, Politics, and International Studies at the University of Bristol. A leading specialist in security policy, capacity building and security sector reform with a particular focus on the maritime domain, he is co-director of the SafeSeas Network and has played an advisory role in UK policy processes, including work on the 2022 UK National Strategy for Maritime Security. His research on maritime security has been supported by the UK Economic and Social Research Council, the British Academy and the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme, and he previously served as founding Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of International Security for Cambridge University Press and BISA.Publications:Understanding maritime securitySecuring the Seas: A Comprehensive Assessment of Global Maritime SecurityPragmatic ordering: Informality, experimentation, and the maritime security agendaInnovation and New Strategic ChoicesBlue crime: Conceptualising transnational organised crime at seaBeyond seablindness: a new agenda for maritime security studiesContent00:00 - Introduction02:10 - Evolution of Maritime Piracy10:11 - Organization of Pirate Groups13:27 - Structural Conditions Fuelling Piracy20:16 - Size and Scale of Piracy Groups24:08 - Effectiveness of Anti-Piracy Measures31:04 - Defining Assertiveness in Maritime Spaces36:33 - Grey-Zone Tactics at Sea43:50 - Innovating UNCLOS for Maritime Order53:05 - Maritime Chokepoints: Ownership and Control59:25 - Artificial Islands and Maritime Security01:01:43 - Threats to Undersea Infrastructure01:07:02 - Most Challenging Areas in Maritime Security ResearchFollow & Further ResourcesSubstack: https://theirthinker.substack.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ir-thinker/X: https://x.com/irthinker_Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theirthinker/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/theirthinker.bsky.socialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/irthinkerfb Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Global Maritime Security Explained — Timothy Edmunds

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This episode of The IR thinker explores the changing landscape of maritime piracy and security with Professor Tim Edmunds, tracing how piracy has evolved from traditional coastal raiding to more organised, networked forms of criminality at sea. The...

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