Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea
This Open Access book explains ASEAN’s strategic role in managing great power politics in East Asia. Constructing a theory of institutional strategy, this book argues that the regional security institutions in Southeast Asia, ASEAN and ASEAN-led institutions have devised their own institutional stra...
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2022
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1626892023-03-11T20:21:41Z Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea Koga, Kei School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Political science::International relations ASEAN Institutional Strategy Rise of China Balance of Power Secondary Power Great Power Politics East Asia Southeast Asia South China Sea Power Shift Regional Security Institution ASEAN Regional Forum ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting ADMM-Plus ASEAN+3 East Asia Summit ASEAN Ministerial Meeting ASEAN Summit This Open Access book explains ASEAN’s strategic role in managing great power politics in East Asia. Constructing a theory of institutional strategy, this book argues that the regional security institutions in Southeast Asia, ASEAN and ASEAN-led institutions have devised their own institutional strategies vis-à-vis the South China Sea and navigated the great-power politics since the 1990s. ASEAN proliferated new security institutions in the 1990s and 2000s that assumed a different functionality, a different geopolitical scope, and thus a different institutional strategy. In so doing, ASEAN formed a “strategic institutional web” that nurtured a quasi-division of labor among the institutions to maintain relative stability in the South China Sea. Unlike the conventional analysis on ASEAN, this study disaggregates “ASEAN” as a collective regional actor into specific individual institutions—ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, ASEAN Summit, ASEAN-China dialogues, ASEAN Regional Forum, East Asia Summit, and ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting and ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting-Plus—and explains how each of these institutions has devised and/or shifted its institutional strategy to curb great powers’ ambition in dominating the South China Sea while navigating great power competition. The book sheds light on the strategic potential and limitations of ASEAN and ASEAN-led security institutions, offers implications for the future role of ASEAN in the Indo-Pacific region, and provides an alternative understanding of the strategic utilities of regional security institutions. Published version 2022-11-09T05:09:54Z 2022-11-09T05:09:54Z 2022 Book Koga, K. (2022). Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea. Palgrave Macmillan. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162689 978-981-19-2611-2 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162689 10.1007/978-981-19-2611-2 en © 2022 The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s). This book is an open access publication. This book is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license and indicate if changes were made application/pdf Palgrave Macmillan |
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Social sciences::Political science::International relations ASEAN Institutional Strategy Rise of China Balance of Power Secondary Power Great Power Politics East Asia Southeast Asia South China Sea Power Shift Regional Security Institution ASEAN Regional Forum ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting ADMM-Plus ASEAN+3 East Asia Summit ASEAN Ministerial Meeting ASEAN Summit |
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Social sciences::Political science::International relations ASEAN Institutional Strategy Rise of China Balance of Power Secondary Power Great Power Politics East Asia Southeast Asia South China Sea Power Shift Regional Security Institution ASEAN Regional Forum ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting ADMM-Plus ASEAN+3 East Asia Summit ASEAN Ministerial Meeting ASEAN Summit Koga, Kei Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea |
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This Open Access book explains ASEAN’s strategic role in managing great power politics in East Asia. Constructing a theory of institutional strategy, this book argues that the regional security institutions in Southeast Asia, ASEAN and ASEAN-led institutions have devised their own institutional strategies vis-à-vis the South China Sea and navigated the great-power politics since the 1990s. ASEAN proliferated new security institutions in the 1990s and 2000s that assumed a different functionality, a different geopolitical scope, and thus a different institutional strategy. In so doing, ASEAN formed a “strategic institutional web” that nurtured a quasi-division of labor among the institutions to maintain relative stability in the South China Sea. Unlike the conventional analysis on ASEAN, this study disaggregates “ASEAN” as a collective regional actor into specific individual institutions—ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, ASEAN Summit, ASEAN-China dialogues, ASEAN Regional Forum, East Asia Summit, and ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting and ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting-Plus—and explains how each of these institutions has devised and/or shifted its institutional strategy to curb great powers’ ambition in dominating the South China Sea while navigating great power competition. The book sheds light on the strategic potential and limitations of ASEAN and ASEAN-led security institutions, offers implications for the future role of ASEAN in the Indo-Pacific region, and provides an alternative understanding of the strategic utilities of regional security institutions. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Koga, Kei |
format |
Book |
author |
Koga, Kei |
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Koga, Kei |
title |
Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea |
title_short |
Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea |
title_full |
Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea |
title_fullStr |
Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea |
title_full_unstemmed |
Managing great power politics: ASEAN, institutional strategy, and the South China Sea |
title_sort |
managing great power politics: asean, institutional strategy, and the south china sea |
publisher |
Palgrave Macmillan |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162689 |
_version_ |
1761781163488182272 |