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ID:
101027
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Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
The reconfiguration of Southeast Asia (SEA) is explored, with respect to the emergence of India and the rise of China, in shaping the region as a multipolar political space, focusing on understanding the fluidity of SEA as an economic and political source of regional power, especially in the aftermath of the diffusion of bipolar political dominance in the region with the end of the cold war.
An examination of the political economy and the formation of regional powers reveals the nature of this fluidity and its transformation. The region will play a large role in determining the futures of India and China where not only their impact on the region, but also its impact on them, will contribute to the ways, in which the two nations evolve,
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2 |
ID:
131579
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
With a focus on challenges and prospects of APT in East Asian regionalism, among the challenges, the establishment of strong regional and financial institutions such as APT and CMI is not being welcome by the U.S. and the major international financial institutions like IMF, World Bank, etc, so they may lobby to undermine it. There are also calculations that APT would probably be dominated by China. Such calculations by Japan, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, etc favorably affected the deeper regionalization process of APT, and at this framework, no one could balance with China in security and political terms. Such anxiety among its members is also another major obstacle in a deeper process of regionalization. On strategic fronts too, there are competitions among the members of APT.
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