Changing Constellations of Southeast Asia
From Northeast Asia to China
Preview
Book Description
Southeast Asia is among emerging economies that have become important drivers of the world economy. ASEAN has furthered the region’s economic integration. Yet, growth remains dependent on foreign investment. Inequality has grown or remained high. Democracy, instead of consolidating, has stalled or regressed.
Changing Constellations of Southeast Asia seeks to:
- Shed light on the gap between Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia from a variety of viewpoints, across trade and industry, services and education and language policies;
- Examine institutions and elite capture to understand why middle-tier Southeast Asian countries have failed in following the ‘East Asian miracle’;
- Examine China’s growing influence and how this growing role affects Southeast Asia as a constellation.
Contributing to critical political economy and comparative development studies in East Asia, this timely volume will appeal to undergraduate and postgraduate students interested in Southeast Asia studies, International Political Economy, Development sociology and economics, Social Policy and Asian Politics.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Editors
Introduction
1 Southeast and Northeast Asia
1 Jan Nederveen Pieterse
What happened to the Miracle Eight? Looking East in the twenty-first century
2 Andrew Kam Jia Yi
Dynamics of trade and value added in Factory Asia
3 Fazal Rizvi
Higher education in Southeast Asia
4 Zawiah Yahya
The rise of global English and language policies of China, Japan, Malaysia and Thailand
2 Institutions
5 Terence Gomez and Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux
Diversity of Southeast Asian Capitalisms:
Evolving State-Business Relations in Malaysia
6 Marc Saxer
How to escape the transformation trap: Building social consensus for sustainable development
7 Tim Rackett
Thailand: Exception to the rule, or rule by exception?
3 Southeast Asia and China
8 Jan Nederveen Pieterse
Changing constellations of Southeast Asia
9 Abdul Rahman Embong
The charms of China’s New Silk Routes: Connecting the dots in Southeast Asia
10 Siew Yean Tham
Examining the shift to services: Malaysia and China compared
11 Sufian Jusoh
Economic diplomacy in ASEAN: the case of Myanmar and China investment relations
12 Rashila Ramli
Southeast Asia and China relations: Desecuritizing the South China Sea
Editor(s)
Biography
Jan Nederveen Pieterse is Duncan and Suzanne Mellichamp Distinguished Professor of Global Studies and Sociology at University of California, Santa Barbara, USA.
Abdul Rahman Embong is Emeritus Professor in Sociology of Development and Principal Research Fellow at the Institute of Malaysian and International Studies, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Malaysia.
Siew Yean Tham is a Senior Fellow at ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore.
Reviews
Cast in terms of its embeddedness in two successive ‘constellations’ of economic, political and socio-cultural power (the first driven by Northeast Asia, the second by China), the chapters of this volume contain materials, ideas and arguments vital to rethinking Southeast Asia’s global significance. For anyone seeking cutting-edge knowledge about contemporary Southeast Asian development – including both the opportunities and dangers inherent in its future prospects – this is the book you need.
Jeffrey Henderson, University of Bristol
This volume contains gems on East Asian economies including China as well as for those interested in comparative analysis. Nederveen Pieterse, Rahman and Tham have provided editorial coherence to the chapters which reflect on the region’s miracle, debacle, trajectories and options for the future.
Jomo Kwame Sundaram, former economics professor, UN Assistant Secretary General, 2007 Wassily Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought
This is a most enlightening book about contemporary Southeast Asia. Readers will profit immensely from the useful comparisons between ASEAN and Northeast Asia, thoughtful analyses of the role of domestic institutions on socio-economic performance, and insightful projections of future China-ASEAN relations. I am proud that scholarship on Southeast Asia has advanced so impressively.
Wing Thye Woo, University of California Davis, Fudan University, Shanghai; President of Jeffrey Cheah Institute on Southeast Asia, Sunway University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia