Search results
Filter
Format
Type
Language
More Languages
Time Range
41493 results
Sort by:
Rethinking East Asian community building
In: China international studies, Volume 45, Issue 2, p. 71-84
ISSN: 1673-3258
World Affairs Online
Projecting East Asian Community-Building
In: China and Asian Regionalism, p. 21-28
EAST ASIAN COMMUNITY: DREAM OR REALITY?
In: China and East Asia; Series on Contemporary China, p. 127-147
East Asian regionalism: a road towards an East Asian Community
In: Korea and world affairs: a quarterly review, Volume 29, Issue 3, p. 391-414
ISSN: 0259-9686
World Affairs Online
Do Asian Values Matter - for an East Asian Community?
In: Politics & policy: a publication of the Policy Studies Organization, Volume 35, Issue 1, p. 154-161
ISSN: 1555-5623
East Asian Regionalism - A Road towards an East Asian Community
In: Korea and world affairs: a quarterly review, Volume 29, Issue 3, p. 391-414
ISSN: 0259-9686
Do Asian values matter—for an East Asian community
In: Peace research abstracts journal, Volume 44, Issue 5, p. 154-156
ISSN: 0031-3599
Hatoyama's East Asian Community and Sino-Japanese relation
In: East Asian policy: an international quarterly, Volume 2, Issue 1, p. 60-68
ISSN: 1793-9305
Japanese Prime Minister Hatoyama has formulated an elaborate balance of power plan that seeks to counter both China and US in the interest of Japan. To this end Hatoyama would also have to improve Japan's relations with its neighbours while maintaining old ties with its traditional ally. The East Asian Community, in this case, is more of an end product than a means as widely perceived. (East Asian Pol/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
East Asian Community: Surmounting the History Issue
In: New Zealand international review, Volume 32, Issue 6, p. 10-13
ISSN: 0110-0262
What explains ASEAN's leadership in East Asian community building?
In: Pacific affairs, Volume 87, Issue 2, p. 247-264
ISSN: 0030-851X
Conventional wisdom holds that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has been able to lead community building in East Asia by default, against the background of Sino-Japanese rivalries. The present study maintains that this line of argument is insufficient, and offers a complementary account, centered on the statement that ASEAN has actively constructed a social environment which defines itself as the legitimate leader of East Asian community building. More specifically, the leadership of ASEAN can be explained in terms of three parallel developments since the early 1990s that are associated with the Asia-Pacific framework of the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF): the Southeast Asian association has been able to lead community building in East Asia because (1) it has advanced the vision of an "East Asian community" by drawing on its cooperative security norm embodied in the ARF; (2) through their participation in the ARF process, the Northeast Asian powers have come to recognize the value of ASEAN's cooperative security norm, and thus to share with the Southeast Asian nations their vision of an East Asian community; and (3) the sharing of a community-building vision by all the East Asian countries has constituted a structure that makes it costly for the Northeast Asian powers to challenge the Southeast Asian association. (Pac Aff/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
An East Asian community and the United States
In: Significant Issues Series, Vol. 29, No. 5
World Affairs Online
Japan's new Asian policy: hope for an East Asian community
In: East Asian policy: an international quarterly, Volume 1, Issue 4, p. 55-62
ISSN: 1793-9305
World Affairs Online
What Explains ASEAN's Leadership in East Asian Community Building?
In: Pacific affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, Volume 87, Issue 2, p. 247-264
ISSN: 1715-3379
Building an East Asian Community: Origins, Structure, and Limits
In: Asian perspective, Volume 26, Issue 4, p. 83-112
ISSN: 2288-2871