In 2016, the United Nations (UN) General Assembly and the UN Security Council respectively adopted resolutions on the review of the UN peacebuilding architecture, and the concept of ’sustaining peace‘ was formally presented. Since then, the ’sustaining peace‘ agenda has gradually become the core strategy of the peace cause of the UN. The agenda for sustaining peace emphasizes capacity-building for conflict prevention at the regional level.
Faced with the escalation of the international security challenge, regional organizations are increasingly playing a prominent role. They have become important participants in the international peace and security agenda by enhancing cooperation with the UN. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), as the centre of regional cooperation processes in the Asia-Pacific, established a series of norms and instruments related to conflict prevention. This book intends to promote discussions on linking conflict prevention and/or preventive diplomacy activities in the region with the sustaining peace agenda promoted by both the ASEAN on a regional scale and the UN on a global scale.
In a collaboration between the ASEAN Institute for Peace and Reconciliation (ASEAN-IPR) and China Foreign Affairs University (CFAU), the book provides discussions from the perspective of both Chinese as well as ASEAN scholars on traditional, as well as emerging, topics on sustaining peace, as well as conflict prevention, conflict management, and conflict resolution.
Contents:
- Developmental Peace: The Chinese Approach to UN Peacekeeping and Peacebuilding (He Yin)
- Implementing the Development Approach to Conflict Prevention in an Ongoing Conflict Context: Experience, Challenges, and Lessons Learned from Thailand (Suphatmet Yunyasit)
- Relational Security and Practices in ASEAN (Ji Ling)
- Examining the Space for Adaptation and Innovation in Conflict Management in the Global South (Joel Ng)
- Southeast Asia’s Response on Public Health Security Crisis from the Perspective of Regionalism and International Cooperation (Hu Xin)
- More of the Same: ASEAN Conflict Management in the COVID-19 Era (Fitriani)
- Ways to Construct a New Asia-Pacific Security Architecture: A Chinese Integrative Outlook (Su Hao and Xiong Yuetian)
- ASEAN and the Challenge of Democracy (Amina Rasul)
Readership: Academics, policymakers, professionals, undergraduate and graduate students interested in preventative diplomacy, peacebuilding, peacekeeping in China and Southeast Asia.