The Asia-Pacific Security Lexicon

Front Cover
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2002 - Asia - 224 pages

In the turbulent decade since the ending of the Cold War in Europe, a new element of the international relations of Asia and the Pacific has been the emergence of multilateral security dialogues. Both in governmental arenas such as the ASEAN Regional Forum and numerous "track two" channels including the Council for Security Co-operation in Asia-Pacific, it has been a decade of creative interaction and new thinking. The Asia-Pacific Security Lexicon identifies the key phrases and ideas that have been the foundation of these dialogues, looking at their origins in international diplomacy and tracing their specific adaptation and modification to the conditions of a trans-Pacific setting. Of interest to both theoreticians and practitioners, the Lexicon is at once a handbook for regional diplomacy and an assessment of the factors that have shaped regional discussions. 

About the author (2002)

•David Capie is completing his Ph.D. at York University in Toronto and in the fall 2001 is taking up a post-doctoral appointment at the Institute of International Relations at the University of British Columbia. 

•Paul Evans is Professor and Director of the Program on Canada-Asia Policy Studies at the University of British Columbia and cross-appointed at the Institute of Asian Research and the Liu Centre for the Study of Global Issues. 

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