Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:693Hits:20000304Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID052327
Title ProperEnvironemental protection and US-Asia relations: a policy of disconnect
LanguageENG
AuthorElliott, Lorraine
PublicationJune 2004.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Despite the post-September 11 focus on regional security and the continued emphasis on regional economic cooperation, environmental degradation should not be overlooked as an important issue for US policy in and relationship with the Asia-Pacific. It is an important issue in its own right, presenting the countries of the region with ecological, economic and social (human security) challenges. There are both ethical and instrumental impulses for the United States, as a rich indus­trialised country and as a disproportionate consumer of resources and polluter of global waste, to provide environmental assistance to the Asia-Pacific. Despite global demands that the 'new' new world (environmental) order should be based on solidarity and collective responsibility, neither US environmental policy towards the region nor the regional consequences of its international environmental policy more generally meet this test. The US is fundamentally self-regarding rather than other-regarding in the various dimensions of its environmental relationship with the region. The consequences for both the region and for the US may be substantial. Continued environmental degradation in the region has the potential to undermine other US policy goals, in terms of its reputation, it economic objectives and even its more orthodox geopolitical security objectives.
`In' analytical NotePacific Review Vol. 17, No.2; June 2004: p 291-314
Journal SourcePacific Review 2004-06 17, 2
Key WordsAsia-Pacific ;  United States ;  Environmental Degradatation ;  Enviromental protection ;  International Relations ;  Human Security ;  Kyoto Protocol