CIAO DATE: 08/2009
Volume: 8, Issue: 1
January 2008
Gregory J. Moore
Speaking of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s (DPRK) test of a nuclear device on 9 October 2006, official statements from the government of one of the permanent five members of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) claimed that ‘the DPRK ignored [the] universal opposition of the international community and flagrantly conducted the nuclear test’ and that this government ‘is resolutely opposed to it’. Moreover, in 2005, an expert on North Korea working in the defense sector of the same UNSC permanent-five member told the author that he thought the Kim Jong-Il regime was ‘scary’ and ‘despotic’ and that Kim maintains his rule by ‘brainwashing’ his people. It would certainly not be surprising to hear such words about North Korea from a member of the Bush Administration, or perhaps from a Brit. Yet, strange though it might seem to some, the views expressed about North Korea’s nuclear test above came from official Chinese statements (People’s Daily, October 2006), and the defense expert was one of China’s most senior North Korean watchers, one with many years of experience in both Koreas.
Monetary and financial cooperation in Asia: taking stock of recent ongoings (PDF)
Ramkishen S. Rajan
Ever since the currency crisis of 1997–98, there has been a great deal of interest in enhancing regional economic cooperation in Asia. It is important to keep in mind that economic regionalism is of multidimensional nature. The focus of this paper is on policy initiatives underway in Asia to enhance monetary and financial regionalism and the analytical bases for these initiatives, rather than on examining the de facto level of financial and monetary links that already exists (which may or may not have been facilitated via regional policy mechanisms). There are many gradations of monetary and financial regionalism, ranging from the weak form involving regional policy dialog and surveillance, on the one hand, to exchange rate and monetary coordination, on the other. To maintain focus, this paper concentrates more narrowly on ‘medium forms’ of monetary and financial regionalism, broadly defined as the development of regional liquidity arrangements and regional financial markets.
Kai He
Indonesian politics opened a new phase of democratization after Soeharto stepped down from his 32 years of authoritarian rule. In this paper, Indonesia’s foreign policy changes after Soeharto are systematically examined through an ‘international pressure–political legitimacy’ model derived from neoclassical realism. This model specifies that Indonesia’s foreign policy during democratization is mainly influenced by two factors: international pressure and the political legitimacy of the new democratic government. Four cases of foreign policy decision-making from three post-Soeharto presidencies are examined: (i) Indonesia’s East Timor policy under Habibie; (ii) Indonesia’s ‘silence response’ toward China’s protest on the anti-Chinese riots under Habibie; (iii) Wahid’s ‘looking towards Asia’ proposal; and (iv) Megawati’s anti-terrorism and Aceh military operation. The results show that political legitimacy shapes the nature of state behavior, i.e. balancing or compromising, whereas international pressure determines the pattern of state behavior, i.e. external/internal balancing or compromising in words/in deeds.
Contesting soft power: Japanese popular culture in East and Southeast Asia (PDF)
Nissim Kadosh Otmazgin
During the last two decades, Japanese popular culture industries have massively penetrated East Asia’s markets and their products have been widely disseminated and consumed. In this region, Japan has recently emerged as a cultural power, in addition to representing an industrial forerunner and model. The aim of this article is to explore the connection between popular culture and soft power by analyzing the activities of the Japanese popular culture industries in East Asia, and by examining the images their products disseminates. This study is based on export data, market surveys, and interviews with media industry personnel and consumers in five cities in East Asia, arguing that the impact of the Japanese popular culture lies in shaping this region’s cultural markets and in disseminating new images of Japan, but not in exerting local influence or in creating Japanese-dominated ‘spheres of influence’.
Australia's treaty activity in the Asia-Pacific: a sub-regional trends analysis (PDF)
Gregory L. Rose
This paper investigates Australian treaty making with neighboring countries in the Asia-Pacific. Patterns of Australian treaty making with South East Asian countries are markedly different to those with South West Pacific countries and the difference is continuing to deepen. Treaties with the former are primarily bilateral and commercially oriented, whereas those with the latter are plurilateral and oriented to natural resources management and development. There is a major gap in Australian subregional treaty activity for natural resources management in South East Asian countries. A coalescence of issues in the law enforcement and security categories is occurring and the new direction in Australian regional treaty making for both subregions is to strengthen capacity to enforce the rule of law in national legal systems. Commercial treaty making remains and is likely to continue to be the strongest area of treaty activity.
Beyond Japan: The Dynamics of East Asian Regionalism (PDF)
Keiichi Tsunekawa
Re-Orienting the Fundamentals: Human Rights and New Connections in EU-Asia Relations (PDF)
Atsuko Abe