ABSTRACT

Relations between the EU and East Asia have consistently expanded in recent years, particularly between the EU and Japan. Against the background of negotiations on an economic and strategic partnership agreement, the EU–Japan relationship is set to become the single most comprehensive ‘region-to-state’ relationship the world has known today, accounting for more than a third of world GDP and a combined population of more than 600 million people.

This book addresses the potential role of the EU, in cooperation with Japan, to craft a stable and prosperous mode of governance in the Asian region. In today’s globalized world seemingly defined by waxing Chinese power and waning American power, the book reflects the lack of appreciation for an EU-Japan concert in maintaining and developing multilateral principles. It aims towards fortifying this relationship by acknowledging that in order to enhance the credibility and capabilities of such an alliance, it is necessary to take stock of where the partnership stands today, what kind of obstacles still need to be overcome and which options have been left untouched.

By introducing state-of-the-art empirical research in multiple fields, this book will be of key interest to students and scholars of international relations, comparative regionalism, the European Union and Japanese politics.

part I|90 pages

Europe and Japan in East Asia

chapter 1|21 pages

Japan–Europe security cooperation

A view from Japan

chapter 2|15 pages

Legal construction of an East Asian community

Is it worth it?

chapter 3|22 pages

The EU’s security interests in East Asia

Japan as a strategic partner?

chapter 5|15 pages

Building an organization for security and co-operation in Asia

The European experience and Japan’s role

part II|67 pages

EU–Japan cooperation in practice

chapter 7|16 pages

The weakest link

Problems and possibilities of unbalanced investment relations between the EU and Japan*

chapter 8|16 pages

Mainstreaming climate change into development cooperation

Comparing European and Japanese approaches