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Remapping East Asia: The Construction of a Region

270

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2005

Year

TLDR

East Asia remains historically divided by conflict and territorial disputes, yet recent region‑building efforts are increasingly fostering cooperation and reshaping its role in global politics. The book examines the actors, mechanisms, and institutions driving East Asian region‑building. It adopts a multidisciplinary lens, covering security, leadership dynamics, business networks, counterterrorism, and environmental political economy. The authors find that states, corporations, and issue‑specific coalitions advance regional cohesion through formal institutions and informal, semi‑formal, or covert actions.

Abstract

An overarching ambiguity characterizes East Asia today. The region has at least a century-long history of internal divisiveness, war, and conflict, and it remains the site of several nettlesome territorial disputes. However, a mixture of complex and often competing agents and processes has been knitting together various segments of East Asia. In Remapping East Asia, T. J. Pempel suggests that the region is ripe for cooperation rather than rivalry and that recent region-building developments in East Asia have had a substantial cumulative effect on the broader canvas of international politics. This collection is about the people, processes, and institutions behind that region-building. In it, experts on the area take a broad approach to the dynamics and implications of regionalism. Instead of limiting their focus to security matters, they extend their discussions to topics as diverse as the mercurial nature of Japan's leadership role in the region, Southeast Asian business networks, the war on terrorism in Asia, and the political economy of environmental regionalism. Throughout, they show how nation-states, corporations, and problem-specific coalitions have furthered regional cohesion not only by establishing formal institutions, but also by operating informally, semiformally, or even secretly.