Existing theories of cooperation assume a stable geo-political order, led by countries with a shared conception of the modalities of cooperation. These assumptions are no longer justified. Effective Multilateralism makes the case for a new approach to explaining international cooperation through the lens of East Asian.
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Table of Contents Introduction: International Cooperation Under Order Transition Jochen Prantl PART I: EXPLAINING COOPERATION- DISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES 1. Effective Multilateralism and Global Order; Andrew Hurrell 2. The Regionalization of Security: A Comparative Analysis; Louise Fawcett 3. China’s Approach to Multilateralism in East Asia; Su Changhe 4. Effective Multilateralism—A U.S. Perspective; Bruce Jentleson 5. Japan and Regional Multilateralism in Asia: The Trilateral Strategic Dialogue as a New Institutional Choice; Kuniko Ashizawa 6. Thinking in Time: War Memories, Post-war Reconciliation and Regional Co-operation in Europe and Asia; Hartmut Mayer 7. Effective Multilateralism and Sino-Japanese Reconciliation; Shogo Suzuki 8. Hierarchy and Great Power Cooperation in the East Asian Security Order; Evelyn Goh 9. Formalizing Informal Cooperation?; Robert Ayson PART II: CASE STUDIES 10. Selective or Effective Multilateralism? The Bush Administration’s Proliferation Security Initiative and China’s Response; Rosemary Foot 11. The Mismanagement of Global Imbalances: Why Did Multilateralism Fail?; Andrew Walter 12. Responding to Climate Change in the Region: New Partnerships and Chinese Leadership; Katherine Morton 13. Global Promulgation – Regional Implementation? The Responsibility to Protect in East Asia; Jochen Prantl and Ryoko Nakano
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Kuniko Ashizawa, Johns Hopkins University, USA Robert Ayson, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Louise Fawcett, University of Oxford, UK Rosemary Foot, University of Oxford, UK Evelyn Goh, Australian National University Andrew Hurrell, University of Oxford, UK Bruce Jentleson, Duke University, UK Hartmut Mayer, St. Peter’s College, University of Oxford, UK Katherine Morton, Australian National University Ryoko Nakano, National University of Singapore Su Changhe, Fudan University, Shanghai Shogo Suzuki, University of Manchester, UK Andrew Walter, University of Melbourne, Australia