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Asia's New Multilateralism: Cooperation, Competition, and the Search for Community

Edited by Michael J. Green and Bates Gill

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Paper, 400 pages, 9 illus; 5 tables
ISBN: 978-0-231-14443-8
$32.50 / £22.50

February, 2009
Cloth, 400 pages, 9 illus; 5 tables
ISBN: 978-0-231-14442-1
$89.50 / £62.00

Preface

Abbreviations

1. Unbundling Asia's New Multilateralism

Bates Gill and Michael J. Green

Part I National Strategies for Regionalism

2. Evolving U.S. Views on Asia's Future Institutional Architecture

Ralph A. Cossa

3. Chinese Perspectives on Building an East Asian Community in the Twenty-first Century

Wu Xinbo

4. Regional Multilateralism in Asia and the Korean Question

Lim Wonhyuk

5. Japan's Perspective on Asian Regionalism

Akiko Fukushima

6. India and the Asian Security Architecture

C. Raja Mohan

7. Australia's Pragmatic Approach to Asian Regionalism

Greg Sheridan

8. The Strong in the World of the Weak: Southeast Asia in Asia's Regional Architecture

Amitav Acharya

Part II The Functional Challenges

9. Emerging Economic Architecture in Asia: Opening or Insulating the Region?

Amy Searight

10. Norms and Regional Architecture: Multilateral Institution Building in Asia and Its Impact on Governance and Democracy

William Cole and Erik G. Jensen

11. Defense Issues and Asia's Future Security Architecture

Michael E. O'Hanlon

12. Nontraditional Security and Multilateralism in Asia: Reshaping the Contours of Regional Security Architecture

Mely Caballero-Anthony

13. Challenges to Building an Effective Asia-Pacific Security Architecture

Brendan Taylor and William T. Tow

Appendix. Selected List of Principal Regional Institutions in Asia

Contributors

Index

Related Subjects


About the Author

Michael J. Green is the Japan Chair and senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and an associate professor of international relations at Georgetown University. He has served as special assistant to the president for national security affairs and senior director for Asian affairs at the National Security Council. His publications include Japan's Reluctant Realism and Arming Japan.Bates Gill is the director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). He previously held the CSIS Freeman Chair in China Studies and was a senior fellow in foreign policy studies and the inaugural director of the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution. His most recent book is Rising Star: China's New Security Diplomacy.

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