ASEAN-India-Australia: Towards Closer Engagement in a New Asia

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William T Tow, Chin Kin Wah
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2009 - Political Science - 417 pages
India's emergence of a great power has sensitized its regional neighbours to its growing role as a key security actor in an increasingly interdependent world. Both Australia and ASEAN now view India as a major player in the formulation and application of their own broad security agendas. This emerging trilateral compendium is particularly evident in such policy areas as maritime security, climate change, energy security, law enforcement, "good governance" and the politics of security institutions or "architectures". This book represents one of the first systematic efforts to consolidate these diverse but important concerns into an overarching framework for ascertaining and cross-comparing how these three entities are approaching these policy challenges, individually and collectively. It argues that the dynamics underlying their intensifying security relations are sufficiently important to conceptualize them as a distinct analytical framework that needs to be understood in the larger context of Asia-Pacific security politics.
 

Contents

ENERGY SECURITY
77
CLIMATE CHANGE
129
MARITIME SECURITY
183
LAW ENFORCEMENTCOMBATING INTERNATIONAL CRIME
291
21 Conclusion by Pritam Singh and Michael Wesley
361
Bibliography
369
Index
399
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About the author (2009)

•William T. Tow is Professor, Department of International Relations, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra.

•Chin Kin Wah is Deputy Director, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore.

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