From Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing to Transnational Organised Crime in Fishery from an Indonesian Perspective

AuthorAryuni Yuliantiningsih - Hartiwiningsih - Ade Maman Suherman - Emmy Latifah
PositionDoctoral Candidate at Faculty of Law of Sebelas Maret University (UNS), Surakarta, Indonesia; Lecturer at Faculty of Law Jenderal Soedirman University (UNSOED, Purwokerto). S.H. (UNSOED), M.H. (Padjajaran Univ./UNPAD, Bandung) - Professor in criminal law at UNS. S.H (Lampung Univ.), M. Hum./Ph.D. (UNDIP) - Professor in international law at UNSO...
Pages335-336
TOC in Fishery 335
XI JEAIL 2 (2018)
Aryuni Yuliantiningsih
∗∗
& Hartiwiningsih
∗∗∗
&
Ade Maman Suherman
∗∗∗∗
& Emmy Latifah
∗∗∗∗∗
Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (IUUF) is a complex problem because
IUUF perpetrators not only have sheries management issues, but also commit other
crimes. This phenomenon raises further academic analysis of crime in fisheries at
domestic and international levels. Indonesia has experienced different events leading
to addressing crimes related to sheries, which initially came from IUUF practices. To
achieve legal certainty, crimes in sheries issues must be separated from IUUF because
IUUF is a matter under the mandate of FAO and crime in shery is under the mandate
of UNODC. Many have mixed IUUF and crimes in shery in one basket, making the
matter confusing from legal and practical point of view. At the domestic level, there
must be a regulatory framework recognizing the linkage between sheries and criminal
activities At the international level, meanwhile, there must be an international
From Illegal, Unreported
and Unregulated Fishing to
Transnational Organised
Crime in Fishery from an
Indonesian Perspective
The research and publication was supported by the Doctoral Dissertation Research Grant of Ministry of Research and
Technology of Higher Education Indonesia. (Contract Number: 059/SP2H/LT/DPRM/2018). The authors would like to
thank Ambassador Arif Havas Oegroseno for his valuable comments on the earlier version of this paper.
∗∗ Doctoral Candidate at Faculty of Law of Sebelas Maret University (UNS), Surakarta, Indonesia; Lecturer at Faculty
of Law Jenderal Soedirman University (UNSOED, Purwokerto). S.H. (UNSOED), M.H. (Padjajaran Univ./UNPAD,
Bandung). ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0761-5345. The author may be contacted at: aryuni71@gmail.com /
Address: Law Faculty, UNSOED, Jl. H.R. Bunyamin 708, Puwokerto, Indonesia.
∗∗∗ Professor in criminal law at UNS. S.H (Lampung Univ.), M. Hum./Ph.D. (UNDIP). ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-
0003-3761-9117 The author may be contacted at: hartiwiningsih@yahoo.com/Address: Jl.Ir. Sutami 36 A Central Java,
Indonesia.
∗∗∗∗ Professor in international law at UNSOED. S.H. (UNSOED), MSc.(Groningen), Ph.D. (Univ. of Indonesia, Jakarta).
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6888-8972. The author may be contacted at: ademamans@yahoo.com / Address: Jl.
HR Bunyamin, 708 Kampus UNSOED Grendeng Purwokerto, Central Java, Indonesia.
∗∗∗∗∗ Associate Professor at UNS. S.H (UNS), M.H./Ph.D. (UNPAD). ORCID: https://orcid.org./0000-0001-9593-1163. The
author may be contacted at: emmy.latifah@yahoo.com /Address: Jl. Ir. Sutami 36 A, Central Java, Solo, Indonesia.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14330/jeail.2018.11.2.04

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