Indonesia is an island State that geographically consists of 70 percent of marine areas and 30 percent of the land. But there is no Indonesian marine policy, nor has any law governing marine comprehensively since ratified UNCLOS in 1982 by Law No. 17 of 1985. While the mindset of people still tend to the land. The enforcement of sovereignty and rule of law in Indonesian waters under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS 1982) and the regulations of Indonesia against the violations of law known as Transnational Organized Crimes has not yet been done optimally. The problem is what efforts should be made by the State to anticipate the transnational organized crime. The method used in this study is normative approach and analyzed qualitatively to produce the conclusion that efforts should be made are resulting integrated marine policy, Indonesian Marine Law, and disseminating people to change the mindset to sea.
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