ABSTRACT

Key events in Asia’s recent history have included the end of the Cold War, the Asian Economic Crisis and the ‘war on terror’. This is a critical assessment of these events, and of the interplay of security and economics in shaping political regimes and modifying market systems.

Based on the notion that market systems are inherently political and conflict-ridden, this collection clarifies and explains the conflicts shaping the path of neoliberal globalization. Collectively it represents a disciplined and systematic address of four overarching questions:

* What are the significant conflicts emanating from neoliberal globalization, and what are their implications?
* What are the implications of new security concerns for these conflicts, and what are their impacts?
* How are conflicts associated with globalization and security affecting social and economic policy directions?
* Can these directions be reconciled with the reproduction of existing political regimes, or do they threaten their basis?

In addressing these questions, the essays depict neoliberal globalization – in the new security context – as being able to accommodate a range of political regimes. This fascinating collection is a must-read for those with a professional interest in the region post-9/11.

This book was previously published as a special issue of the Journal Critical Asian Studies.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Globalization, Conflict, and Political Regimes in East and Southeast Asia

part |96 pages

Markets, Security, and Political Regimes in Asia

chapter |19 pages

Neoliberalism and the Future World

Markets and the End of Politics

chapter |20 pages

After Neoliberal Globalization

The “Securitization” of U.S. Foreign Economic Policy in East Asia

chapter |18 pages

U.S. Hegemony and Southeast Asia

The Impact of, and Limits to, U.S. Power and Influence

chapter |16 pages

APEC, Globalization, and 9/11

The Debate on What Constitutes Asian Regionalism

part |124 pages

Governance and Conflict in Asia

chapter |20 pages

Full Circle?

Rural Land Reforms in Globalizing China

chapter |19 pages

The Antipolitics of Good Governance

From Global Social Policy to a Global Populism?

chapter |22 pages

The Arroyo Government and “Civil Society” Participation in the Philippines

Neoliberalism, Political Alliances, and Succession

chapter |22 pages

Political Regimes and Development Assistance

The Political Economy of Aid Selectivity

chapter |21 pages

Indonesian Local Party Politics

A Site of Resistance to Neoliberal Reform