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CHINA-ASEAN RELATIONS (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   130588


China-ASEAN relations, September 2013 to December 2013: chronology of events / Dan, Wu   Journal Article
Dan, Wu Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract As a research institute based in Singapore, the EAI monitors developments in relations and interactions between China and the individual countries of Southeast Asia as well as the ASEAN grouping as a whole. This material is presented in the form of (1) a chronology of events, and (2) important documents.
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2
ID:   098871


Non-traditional security in China-ASEAN cooperation: The Institutionalization of Regional security cooperation and the evolution of East Asian regionalism / Arase, David   Journal Article
Arase, David Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The institutionalization of China-ASEAN non-traditional security cooperation is underappreciated, even though its significance should be apparent to Western analysts. Appreciating China-ASEAN non-traditional security cooperation leads to the realization that it has strategic significance, and that the broader China-ASEAN multilateral process is the most institutionally developed expression of East Asian regionalism today.
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3
ID:   185232


Talking Green, Building Brown : China-ASEAN Environmental and Energy Cooperation in the BRI Era / Liao, Jessica C   Journal Article
Liao, Jessica C Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines the evolution of China-ASEAN environmental and energy cooperation since the 2010s with a focus on changes following the launch of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). It shows that over the past decade China and ASEAN have actively expanded cooperative frameworks and mechanisms in the domain of environmental protection as part of their comprehensive approach to sustainable development, particularly regarding energy projects. Nonetheless, the implementation record in their energy cooperation, that is, the lion’s share of BRI projects in Southeast Asia, remains unsustainable and contradicts with their shared “green” policy discourse. The article examines factors from both sides of China and ASEAN that contribute to this disconnect and explains why China’s own accomplishments in renewable energy development fail to spill over to Southeast Asia. These findings have implications for China’s impact on global governance and its leadership role in the Global South.
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