03476oam 2200565 450 991078447190332120170523091551.01-317-47638-71-315-70628-81-317-47639-51-280-91247-297866109124760-7656-2000-610.4324/9781315706283 (OCoLC)643556949(MiFhGG)GVRL5GCV(EXLCZ)99100000000034847020031223d2004 uy 0engurun|---uuuuatxtccrAsia-Pacific security cooperation national interests and regional order /See Seng Tan and Amitav Acharya, editorsArmonk, N.Y. :M.E. Sharpe,2004.1 online resource (xxxii, 264 pages)Gale eBooks"An East Gate book."0-7656-1475-8 0-7656-1474-X Includes bibliographical references (p. 221-251) and index.Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; A Region in Transition; Evolving Approaches to Security; Architecture of This Volume; Three Cheers and a Caveat; List of Acronyms and Abbreviations; Part I; 1 Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific Evolution of Concepts and Practices; 2 Convergent Security Revisited Reconciling Bilateral and Multilateral Security Approaches; 3 Accelerating the Evolutionary Process of Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific An Australian Perspective; Part II; 4 The Evolving Chinese Conception of Security and Security Approaches5 Indonesia and Regional Security The Quest for Cooperative Security6 Japan's Compound Approach to Security Cooperation; 7 South Korea's Strategy for Inter-Korean Relations and Regional Security Cooperation; 8 Malaysian Defense and Security Cooperation Coming Out of the Closet; 9 The Revitalized Philippine-U.S. Security Relations The Triumph of Bilateralism Over Multilateralism in Philippine F; 10 Singapore's Perspective on the Asia-Pacific Security Architecture; 11 Thailand's Perspective on Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific12 Recalibration Not Transformation U.S. Security Policies in the Asia-PacificNotes; Notes to Introduction; Notes to Chapter 1; Notes to Chapter 2; Notes to Chapter 3; Notes to Chapter 4; Notes to Chapter 5; Notes to Chapter 6; Notes to Chapter 7; Notes to Chapter 8; Notes to Chapter 9; Notes to Chapter 10; Notes to Chapter 11; Notes to Chapter 12; About the Editors and Contributors; The Editors; The Contributors; IndexContributors explore: why some forms of security cooperation and institutionalization in the Asia-Pacific are more feasible than others; bilateral security cooperation and emerging multilateral structures; and factors needed to develop complementary relationships between states. Patterns of change and continuity are identified and analyzed.National securityPacific AreaNational securityEast AsiaPacific AreaStrategic aspectsEast AsiaStrategic aspectsNational securityNational security355/.031/095Tan See Seng1965-Acharya AmitavMiFhGGMiFhGGBOOK9910784471903321Asia-Pacific security cooperation1057286UNINA