ABSTRACT

New developments in the Asia Pacific are forcing regional officials to rethink the way they manage security issues. The contributors to this work explore why some forms of security cooperation and institutionalisation in the region have proven more feasible than others. This work describes the emergence of the professions in late tsarist Russia and their struggle for autonomy from the aristocratic state. It also examines the ways in which the Russian professions both resembled and differed from their Western counterparts.

part |50 pages

Part I

chapter 1|16 pages

Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific

Evolution of Concepts and Practices

chapter 2|14 pages

Convergent Security Revisited

Reconciling Bilateral and Multilateral Security Approaches

part |170 pages

Part II

chapter 5|17 pages

Indonesia and Regional Security

The Quest for Cooperative Security

chapter 8|27 pages

Malaysian Defense and Security Cooperation

Coming Out of the Closet

chapter 9|18 pages

The Revitalized Philippine-U.S. Security Relations

The Triumph of Bilateralism Over Multilateralism in Philippine Foreign Policy?

chapter 12|15 pages

Recalibration Not Transformation

U.S. Security Policies in the Asia-Pacific