Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Forewords to the First and Second ASEAN Reader: ASEAN: Conception and Evolution
- Forewords to the First and Second ASEAN Reader: ASEAN: The Way Ahead
- Forewords to the First and Second ASEAN Reader: New Challenges for ASEAN
- SECTION I ASEAN: THE LONG VIEW
- SECTION II COUNTRY ANALYSES
- SECTION III COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF THE REGION
- Southeast Asian Societies
- The Southeast Asian Economy
- Southeast Asian Politics
- SECTION IV INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- SECTION V INSTITUTIONS OF ASEAN
- SECTION VI ASSESSING ASEAN'S INTERNAL POLICIES
- ASEAN Political Security Community
- ASEAN Economic Community
- ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community
- SECTION VII ASSESSING ASEAN'S EXTERNAL INITIATIVES
- ASEAN Processes
- 61 Driving East Asian Regionalism: The Reconstruction of ASEAN's Identity
- 62 Pakistan, SAARC and ASEAN Relations
- 63 Neither Skepticism nor Romanticism: The ASEAN Regional Forum as a Solution for the Asia-Pacific Assurance Game
- 64 ASEAN Plus Three and the Rise of Reactionary Regionalism
- 65 How the East Asia Summit Can Achieve its Potential
- 66 ‘Talking Their Walk’? The Evolution of Defense Regionalism in Southeast Asia
- 67 ASEAN FTAs: State of Play and Outlook for ASEAN's Regional and Global Integration
- 68 Taking ASEAN+1 FTAs Towards the RCEP
- 69 RCEP and TPP: Comparisons and Concerns
- 70 Enhancing the Effectiveness of CMIM and AMRO: Selected Immediate Challenges and Tasks
- ASEAN's Major Power Relations
- SECTION VIII SOUTHEAST ASIA: PERIPHERAL NO MORE
- Bibliography
- The Contributors
- The Compilers
61 - Driving East Asian Regionalism: The Reconstruction of ASEAN's Identity
from ASEAN Processes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 June 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Forewords to the First and Second ASEAN Reader: ASEAN: Conception and Evolution
- Forewords to the First and Second ASEAN Reader: ASEAN: The Way Ahead
- Forewords to the First and Second ASEAN Reader: New Challenges for ASEAN
- SECTION I ASEAN: THE LONG VIEW
- SECTION II COUNTRY ANALYSES
- SECTION III COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF THE REGION
- Southeast Asian Societies
- The Southeast Asian Economy
- Southeast Asian Politics
- SECTION IV INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- SECTION V INSTITUTIONS OF ASEAN
- SECTION VI ASSESSING ASEAN'S INTERNAL POLICIES
- ASEAN Political Security Community
- ASEAN Economic Community
- ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community
- SECTION VII ASSESSING ASEAN'S EXTERNAL INITIATIVES
- ASEAN Processes
- 61 Driving East Asian Regionalism: The Reconstruction of ASEAN's Identity
- 62 Pakistan, SAARC and ASEAN Relations
- 63 Neither Skepticism nor Romanticism: The ASEAN Regional Forum as a Solution for the Asia-Pacific Assurance Game
- 64 ASEAN Plus Three and the Rise of Reactionary Regionalism
- 65 How the East Asia Summit Can Achieve its Potential
- 66 ‘Talking Their Walk’? The Evolution of Defense Regionalism in Southeast Asia
- 67 ASEAN FTAs: State of Play and Outlook for ASEAN's Regional and Global Integration
- 68 Taking ASEAN+1 FTAs Towards the RCEP
- 69 RCEP and TPP: Comparisons and Concerns
- 70 Enhancing the Effectiveness of CMIM and AMRO: Selected Immediate Challenges and Tasks
- ASEAN's Major Power Relations
- SECTION VIII SOUTHEAST ASIA: PERIPHERAL NO MORE
- Bibliography
- The Contributors
- The Compilers
Summary
The process of East Asian regionalism received a shot in the arm in 2008 with the proposal made by Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd about restructuring the Asia-Pacific regional architecture. This was followed by the proposal made by Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama on an East Asian community. There are substantive differences between the two concepts (one being that the former has been much more developed over time while the latter has been left for further discussion). Both, however, have attracted quite a bit of attention, not primarily because of their substantive content but more because of their implications for how currently existing regional institutions seem to be falling short of expectation thus creating the need to explore alternative arrangements. In an indirect way, this is reflective of how much its partners are beginning to grow weary of the ASEAN Way and of the way ASEAN has driven the process.
The very success, however, of ASEAN in managing intra-ASEAN relations to the point of being able to make the prospect of conflict between ASEAN member states unlikely (as well as its involvement in the Cambodian conflict) gave it an international stature out of proportion to the status of its individual member states. This was in fact recognized by its dialogue partners when they accepted the idea that the Association should chair the post-Cold War forum that would oversee discussions and dialogue on the security of the Asia-Pacific region. The fact that it was also called the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF) when it was established in 1994 more than stamped the ASEAN mark upon it — it signified the adoption of ASEAN norms (especially the consensus-based method of decision-making) as the foundation for what was effectively a nascent attempt at extra-ASEAN regionalism. That it did so with much misgiving did not detract from its determination to show the applicability of the ASEAN “model” to a wider Asia-Pacific scope. This started ASEAN on its way to a significant shift in the evolution of its identity — from an association dedicated to keeping the Southeast Asian region free from being enmeshed in great power rivalries to one which accepted its “centrality” in a wider East Asian and Asia-Pacific regionalism, a process that would entail accepting the involvement of and engaging the major powers in the context of the region.
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- Information
- The 3rd ASEAN Reader , pp. 323 - 327Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2015