APEC as an Institution

APEC as an Institution

Author: Richard E Feinberg

Publisher: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 275

ISBN-13: 9812302093

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Assesses the strengths and weaknesses of APEC's 'soft' institutionalism, and its capstone policy report, identifies reforms that would close the credibility gap between APEC's promises and accomplishments. Leading scholars at APEC Study Centres investigate APEC's core agenda and delve into the inner workings of bureaucracy.


APEC

APEC

Author: Ippei Yamazawa

Publisher: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 158

ISBN-13: 9814311634

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APEC is a crucial trans-regional arrangement that draws the US into constructive economic engagement with East Asia. This book makes it clear why APEC remains such a crucial element of regional economic architecture and defines an agenda doing forward to which regional leaders should aspire.


APEC at 20

APEC at 20

Author: K Kesavapany

Publisher: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 166

ISBN-13: 9814279269

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Spanning 20 years of history, the achievements of APEC may seem uneventful in the eyes of some observers. Yet careful deliberation will point to APEC's many remarkable high points as well as some of the challenges. The foundations of APEC were set in place about 40 years ago based on the achievements of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC). One of the cornerstones of APEC's vision is to achieve a free and open trade area among its member economies. This vision is anchored in the Bogor Goals that remain the centrepiece of the APEC process. The Bogor Goals represent a cause for celebration as well as angst. Celebration because the region has moved towards achieving a much more liberalized environment of trading and investment since 1989, angst because the deadlines for achieving the goals have not yet been fully realized. Today, APEC embraces many of the world's dynamic developed and developing economies that are better poised to meet the new challenges of this century. For those seeking to get a quick sweep of APEC, this book recalls, reflects and provides enough food for thought on the possible remake of APEC. The chapters are carefully written by experts who have been directly involved in the APEC process one way or another. The invaluable insights serve to place the whole APEC process in a balanced perspective, yet with candid deliberations.


Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation

Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation

Author: Ippei Yamazawa

Publisher: Flipside Digital Content Company Inc.

Published: 2003-08-01

Total Pages: 116

ISBN-13: 9814515914

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Ippei Yamazawa is one of the fathers to the study of Asia-Pacific regional cooperation in Japan and has contributed hugely to the development and work of APEC over many years. APEC is a crucial trans-regional arrangement that draws the United States into constructive economic engagement with East Asia. This book makes it clear why APEC remains such a crucial element of regional economic architecture and defines an agenda going forward to which regional leaders should aspire. Here is a first rate exposition of the priorities for regional cooperation in Asia and the Pacific. --Peter Drysdale, Professor Emeritus, Australian National University


Asian Regionalism, Canadian and Indian Perspectives

Asian Regionalism, Canadian and Indian Perspectives

Author: Charan D. Wadhva

Publisher: APH Publishing

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 290

ISBN-13: 9788176489447

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Canada and India are in many ways natural partners-two middle powers sharing a common political and legal tradition derived from the British Commonwelath, as well as a commitment to multiculturalism, democracy adn international institutions. India's founding Prime Minsiter Jawaharlal nehry had a personal friendship with Canadian Prime Ministers Trudeau and Pearson. Despite this promising start, bilateral relations never took flight-a functiona of Cold War politics, India's relative isolation through much of the post-indepenendence period, the enormous distance between the two countries, and , deep disagreements over India's testing of nuclear weapons in 1974 and 1998. By the start of the new millennium, India and Canada were ready to embark on a new phase in bilateral relations-one defined not only by trade and investment interests, but also by a contemporary understanding of their standing in the world, and the potential contribution that both countries can make to issues of regional and global significance.