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The responsibility to provide in Southeast Asia : towards an ethical explanation

Despite a long-held ASEAN principle of non-intervention, this theoretically rich book argues that there is an embryonic ethic of regional responsibility emerging among the countries of southeast Asia which reflects an evolution of attitudes about state sovereignty.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Tan, See Seng, 1965- (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bristol : Bristol University Press 2019.
Colección:Bristol studies in East Asian international relations.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Series page; Series information; The Responsibility to Provide in Southeast Asia; Copyright; Dedication; Table of contents; List of Tables; List of abbreviations; Acknowledgements; 1 Towards an Ethos of Responsibility in Southeast Asia; Introduction; Responsibility in Southeast Asia: Provision, not protection?; Responsibility for the other: Introducing Levinas; About this book; 2 The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and Responses from Southeast Asia; Introduction; Sovereignty: From right to responsibility; The R2P: A doctrine for the twenty-first century?; Championing the R2P
  • Critiquing the R2PSoutheast Asian responses to the R2P; Conclusion; 3 Towards a 'Responsibility to Provide' (R2Provide) in Southeast Asia; Introduction; Sovereignty and responsibility in Southeast Asia: Beyond the 'ASEAN way'?; Growing signs of regional responsibility; Nargis: Catalyst for the R2Provide?; Formulating and implementing the R2Provide; Conclusion; 4 Institutionalizing Security Regionalism: Responsibility as 'Response Ability'; Introduction; Developing responsibility and 'response ability' in Southeast Asia; Regionalizing security relations
  • A defence regionalism to call their own: The ADMMAncillaries and annexes; Developing responsibility and 'response ability' beyond Southeast Asia; ASEAN Regional Forum: A bridge too far?; ADMM-Plus: A practical regionalism?; Conclusion; 5 Responsible Provision in HADR, Conflict Management and Human Rights; Introduction; Regional cooperation in HADR; HADR in Myanmar: From Nargis to Rohingya; The militarization of HADR: Pros and cons; HADR and implications for preventive diplomacy; HADR and deterrence; Regional cooperation in conflict management; Has ISIS come to Southeast Asia?
  • Counterterrorism strategies: Direct/hard and indirect/softCounterterrorism cooperation: Existing and new forms; Militarizing counterterrorism: Implications for extant convention and practice; Regional cooperation in human rights; Conclusion; 6 Towards the Responsible Management of Disputes in Southeast Asia; Introduction; Regional experiences with rules; Is ASEAN going legal?; The politics behind the charter drafting process; Creating new rules or codifying old ones?; How do Southeast Asians resolve their disputes?; Trade disputes; Territorial disputes
  • Coding interstate conduct in the South China SeaNo rules-based imperative (yet) in Southeast Asia?; Conclusion; 7 Communitarianism, Liberalism and the Limits of Responsibility in Southeast Asia; Introduction; Communitarianism and responsibility; Against totality, towards asymmetry and heteronomy; Conclusion; 8 Levinas and the Responsibility to Provide in Southeast Asia; Introduction; Responsibility as hospitality; Responsibility without reciprocity; Responsibility and justice; The R2Provide as responsibility for the other?; Responsible provision as acts in hospitality