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ID189267
Title ProperFilling the void
Other Title Informationthe Asia-Pacific problem of order and emerging Indo-Pacific regional multilateralism
LanguageENG
AuthorWirth, Christian ;  Jenne, Nicole
Summary / Abstract (Note)Thirty years after the downfall of the Soviet-led communist bloc, the United States-led liberal international order is seen as coming to an end. Policymakers have converged on the need to safeguard the “rules-based order” across the newly coined “Indo-Pacific” region. However, policy and scholarly debates lack clarity about what exactly is to be preserved, and why the terms of the “rules-based order” and the “Indo-Pacific” have rapidly found their way into policy debates despite their contested meaning. Analyzing developments in regional multilateralism, we find that mainstream discourses purport static conceptions of order, which are often conflated with United States-centered trans-Pacific alliance relationships. The ensuing problem of order stems in large part from the fact that multilateral projects for building alternate orders, undertaken since the early 1990s, have remained far below their potential. We conclude that emerging forms of multilateral cooperation across the enlarged “Indo-Pacific” region have partially filled this void.
`In' analytical NoteContemporary Security Policy Vol. 43, No.2; Apr 2022: p.213-242
Journal SourceContemporary Security Policy Vol: 43 No 2
Key WordsRegionalism ;  Multilateralism ;  Asia-Pacific ;  Liberal International Order ;  Indo-Pacific ;  Rules-Based Order


 
 
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