Introduction: A Puzzle of Regions and Institutions -- Sino-Japanese relations and East Asian Regionalism: An Eclectic Approach -- The Rise of China, Japan and the Parameters of the Policy Response -- An East Asian Free Trade Area: Competitive Arrangements -- The Chiang Mai Initiative: Real Financial Regionalism? -- The ASEAN Regional Forum: Security and Community -- The Asian Development Bank: A Rising Tide? -- Conclusion: A Networked Regionalism
Summary
Deepening regional cooperation in East Asia is one of the most significant developments in the world today. In this book, Joel Rathus examines key institutions in East Asia by conducting interviews with the major players around the region. He weaves together a concise and coherent story out of the complicated, contradictory and often confusing details of East Asian regionalism. He argues that the Sino-Japanese relationship is the driver for much of this regionalism. However, their often strained relations have been the cause of a networked style of cooperation in East Asian institutions as opposed to the more formal and legalistic modes seen in Europe and North America