BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance

This book describes the current situation of integration and cooperation in Northeast Asia (China, Taiwan, South Korea, the Korean Peninsula and Japan), considered as "the most heavily militarised region in the world" (p.1). With 19 chapters by different authors, it combines several app...

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Main Author: Amado Mendes, Carmen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM Press) 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/40339/1/BookReview_InstitutionalisingNortheastAsia.pdf
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author Amado Mendes, Carmen
author_facet Amado Mendes, Carmen
author_sort Amado Mendes, Carmen
collection USM
description This book describes the current situation of integration and cooperation in Northeast Asia (China, Taiwan, South Korea, the Korean Peninsula and Japan), considered as "the most heavily militarised region in the world" (p.1). With 19 chapters by different authors, it combines several approaches to the attempts to create regional institutions, arguing that this is a process that is still in its early stages. The theoretical part of the book defines institutionalism and regionalism and includes a comparison of institutionalisation in Northeast Asia and within the European Union, showing the importance of identity building and regional leadership. The chapters of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Richard Higgott and Martina Timmermann, and Baogang He provide a framework for the empirical part of the book, which focus on different case studies and make recommendations related to Northeast Asia. There is a first section on history, ideas and identity, which starts with a question "Northeast Asian regionalism at a crossroads: Is an East Asian Community in sight?" In this chapter, Gilbert Rozman, argues that "a search for 'community' means recognition of the need to seek common values" and that "ignoring values in order to concentrate on economic integration does not offer a way forward. Instead, a joint effort in Northeast Asia should seek consensus on essential values for regionalism" (p. 96). Rozman offers some orientations on how to achieve that, rejecting a purely functionalist approach and favouring the awareness of historical and cultural differences.
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spelling usm.eprints-403392018-05-14T05:21:47Z http://eprints.usm.my/40339/ BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance Amado Mendes, Carmen P1-1091 Philology. Linguistics(General) This book describes the current situation of integration and cooperation in Northeast Asia (China, Taiwan, South Korea, the Korean Peninsula and Japan), considered as "the most heavily militarised region in the world" (p.1). With 19 chapters by different authors, it combines several approaches to the attempts to create regional institutions, arguing that this is a process that is still in its early stages. The theoretical part of the book defines institutionalism and regionalism and includes a comparison of institutionalisation in Northeast Asia and within the European Union, showing the importance of identity building and regional leadership. The chapters of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Richard Higgott and Martina Timmermann, and Baogang He provide a framework for the empirical part of the book, which focus on different case studies and make recommendations related to Northeast Asia. There is a first section on history, ideas and identity, which starts with a question "Northeast Asian regionalism at a crossroads: Is an East Asian Community in sight?" In this chapter, Gilbert Rozman, argues that "a search for 'community' means recognition of the need to seek common values" and that "ignoring values in order to concentrate on economic integration does not offer a way forward. Instead, a joint effort in Northeast Asia should seek consensus on essential values for regionalism" (p. 96). Rozman offers some orientations on how to achieve that, rejecting a purely functionalist approach and favouring the awareness of historical and cultural differences. Penerbit Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM Press) 2010 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/40339/1/BookReview_InstitutionalisingNortheastAsia.pdf Amado Mendes, Carmen (2010) BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance. International Journal of Asia Pacific Studies (IJAPS), 6 (1). pp. 95-99. ISSN ISSN: 1823-6243 http://ijaps.usm.my/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/BookReview_InstitutionalisingNortheastAsia.pdf
spellingShingle P1-1091 Philology. Linguistics(General)
Amado Mendes, Carmen
BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance
title BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance
title_full BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance
title_fullStr BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance
title_full_unstemmed BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance
title_short BOOK REVIEW : Institutionalising Northeast Asia: Regional Steps Towards Global Governance
title_sort book review institutionalising northeast asia regional steps towards global governance
topic P1-1091 Philology. Linguistics(General)
url http://eprints.usm.my/40339/1/BookReview_InstitutionalisingNortheastAsia.pdf
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