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MOON, WOOSIK (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   134213


EU-Korea relations in a changing world project: main results and recommendations / Marx, Axel; Wouters, Jan; Moon, Woosik; Rhee, Yeongseop, Park, Sunhee   Journal Article
Moon, Woosik Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The paper provides an overview of the most important results of a project on EU-Korea economic and regulatory relations funded by the European Commission. The paper first outlines the emergence and development of EU-Korea relations. In the second part, the paper presents the main findings clustered in three thematic areas. A first thematic area focuses on a discussion of the EU-Korea Free Trade Agreement. The second cluster analyzes EU-Korea cooperation on regulatory policies with a main focus on cooperation in the policy areas of security (arms trade and control), chemical regulation, environmental regulation, education, development cooperation and industrial policy. The third part focuses on EU-Korea cooperation concerning regional and international issues. In the third part, the paper presents the main recommendations which were formulated on the basis of the project
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2
ID:   059983


Regional integration: Europe and Asia compared / Moon, Woosik (ed.); Andreosso-O' Callaghan, Bernadette (ed.) 2005  Book
Moon, Woosik Book
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Publication Aldershot, Ashgate Publishing, 2005.
Description xii, 230p.
Standard Number 0754642305
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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049327337.142/MOO 049327MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   108470


Whither East Asian economic integration? Korea’s regionalization cum globalization strategy / Moon, Woosik   Journal Article
Moon, Woosik Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The recent regionalization in East Asia can be defined in terms of regionalization cum globalization. In the case of Europe, regionalization was originally intended to create a preferential and protected area. From its inception, however, regionalization in East Asia emphasized open membership and global liberalization. This so-called open regionalism was then adopted as a fundamental principle of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC). Given that APEC is an inter-regional institution, however, the concept of open regionalism is not applicable to characterize exclusively Asian integration process that gained momentum on the basis of the ASEAN?+?3 framework. For many East Asian countries, a regionalization initiative, especially after the 1997 financial crisis, was a natural response to cope with globalization. Indeed, although East Asian economies are increasingly regionalized, the global market remains crucial and exclusively Asian arrangements are still rare. Globalization and regionalization processes are mutually reinforcing. Singapore is one example that developed into a regional economic hub through the regionalization cum globalization strategy. Given that Korea concluded recently two important free trade areas with the USA and the EU, Korea is also capable of building such a regional economic hub. The first step is to strengthen a cooperation network between the three Northeast Asian countries, China, Japan, and Korea. This network, together with ASEAN, is expected to catalyze the regional integration in East Asia and shape its future evolution.
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