Asian Regional Governance: Crisis and ChangeJayasuriya looks at the changing global and domestic political economies shaping the new regionalism in Asia, and examines the relationship between regional domestic, political and economic structures and forms of regional governance. Well-known contributors in the field focus on the impact of globalization on Asian regionalism, new security challenges, monetary cooperation, sovereignty, democratization, industry policy and China's engagement with southeast Asia. Providing a detailed overview of the conceptual foundations of regional governance, this text is an indispensable resource for all who want to understand the emerging dynamics of regionalism in the Asia Pacific. |
Contents
Section 1 | |
Section 2 | |
Section 3 | |
Section 4 | |
Section 5 | |
Section 6 | |
Section 7 | |
Section 8 | |
Section 13 | |
Section 14 | |
Section 15 | |
Section 16 | |
Section 17 | |
Section 18 | |
Section 19 | |
Section 20 | |
Section 9 | |
Section 10 | |
Section 11 | |
Section 12 | |
Section 21 | |
Section 22 | |
Section 23 | |
Section 24 | |
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AFTA agenda agreements American andthe APEC areas arrangements Asia’s Asian financial crisis Asian regionalism AsiaPacific atthe bilateral bythe CAFTA Cambodia Cambridge capital China China–ASEAN Chinese coalitions competition conglomerates corporate governance currency democratization domestic political dominant East Asian economic cooperation embedded mercantilism emergence exports foreign Forum framework global government’s groups growth hasbeen Hong Kong important increasingly Indonesia industrial institutions inthe region investment investors issues Japan Japanese Jayasuriya Korea Malaysia Mercosur ministers MNCs monetary multilateral Myanmar negotiations neoliberal networks nomenklatura nontradable ofregional ofthe onthe open regionalism organization partners People’s Philippines political economy politicobureaucrats preferential production programmes reform regime regional cooperation regional economic regional governance regional integration regionalist regulatory sector significant Singapore Singapore’s South Korea Southeast Asia Southern Cone strategies structures subregional summit Taiwan Thailand thatthe theASEAN theregion tobe tothe trade liberalization University Press withthe