The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC)
This paper elucidates the role of ontological security for Malaysia in its decision to withdraw from the Cold War-era Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) – a decision central to its collapse. It posits that Malaysia’s ontological security contributed to its decision to withdraw from ASPAC, as opposed to re...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-750502019-12-10T11:29:18Z The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) Zul Hazmi Nordin Kei Koga School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences This paper elucidates the role of ontological security for Malaysia in its decision to withdraw from the Cold War-era Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) – a decision central to its collapse. It posits that Malaysia’s ontological security contributed to its decision to withdraw from ASPAC, as opposed to realist-materialist considerations as conventionally determined by most scholarship on ASPAC. The research draws upon analysis of archival research on declassified diplomatic cables from New Zealand and Australia as well as relevant secondary literature, and from Ontological Security Theory. It is postulated that Malaysia’s non-aligned self-identity formed from its endogenous biographical narratives (i.e. domestic-foreign policy linkage relating to non-alignment) and exogenous routinized relations (i.e. relationship dynamics with Cold War actors). Ultimately, Malaysia’s ontological security may have a role in the decision to withdraw from ASPAC, made possible due to critical situations which converge its ontological security and physical security goals through a common non-alignment policy. Bachelor of Arts 2018-05-28T02:25:40Z 2018-05-28T02:25:40Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75050 en Nanyang Technological University 30 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences Zul Hazmi Nordin The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) |
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This paper elucidates the role of ontological security for Malaysia in its decision to withdraw from the Cold War-era Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) – a decision central to its collapse. It posits that Malaysia’s ontological security contributed to its decision to withdraw from ASPAC, as opposed to realist-materialist considerations as conventionally determined by most scholarship on ASPAC. The research draws upon analysis of archival research on declassified diplomatic cables from New Zealand and Australia as well as relevant secondary literature, and from Ontological Security Theory. It is postulated that Malaysia’s non-aligned self-identity formed from its endogenous biographical narratives (i.e. domestic-foreign policy linkage relating to non-alignment) and exogenous routinized relations (i.e. relationship dynamics with Cold War actors). Ultimately, Malaysia’s ontological security may have a role in the decision to withdraw from ASPAC, made possible due to critical situations which converge its ontological security and physical security goals through a common non-alignment policy. |
author2 |
Kei Koga |
author_facet |
Kei Koga Zul Hazmi Nordin |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Zul Hazmi Nordin |
author_sort |
Zul Hazmi Nordin |
title |
The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) |
title_short |
The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) |
title_full |
The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) |
title_fullStr |
The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) |
title_full_unstemmed |
The ontological security of Malaysia : abandonment of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) |
title_sort |
ontological security of malaysia : abandonment of the asia pacific council (aspac) |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75050 |
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1681046356036157440 |