With the accession of Cambodia in April 1999, the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) finally achieved its founding vision - the incorporation of all ten South-east Asian states. However, ASEAN-10 faces an unprecedented series of challenges, stemming from the organization's rapid enlargement since 1995, economic crisis among key members, and political upheavals in Indonesia, its largest and most important member. ASEAN in 1999 is a pale imitation of the more confident organization which emerged from the end of the Cold War as one of the world's most successful experiments in regionalism. This paper asks whether ASEAN can remain relevant to the management of regional problems.
By:
Jeannie Henderson Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Country of Publication: United States Volume: No.328 Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Spine: 8mm
Weight: 136g ISBN:9780199224319 ISBN 10: 0199224315 Series:Adelphi series Pages: 88 Publication Date:15 February 2005 Audience:
College/higher education
,
Primary
Format:Paperback Publisher's Status: Active
Glossary; Introduction; Chapter 1 ASEAN's Record; Chapter 2 ASEAN's Challenges; Chapter 3 ASEAN and the Asia-Pacific; Conclusion
Jeannie Henderson
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