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Copyright National Sun Yat-sen University Apr 2016

Abstract

Southeast Asia has historically been a meeting point between East Asia and South Asia before Western colonialism opened the region to the West and to the winds of global modernization. Since Japan's coercive decolonization during the Second World War, the dominant outside influences have come from the United States and from the People's Republic of China. The post-Cold War era began with a withdrawal of both China's and US power projection from Southeast Asia, facilitating the configuration of a triangular ménage à trios, with ASEAN expanding to include all of Southeast Asia and introducing a number of extended forums intended to socialize the rest of East Asia into the ASEAN way. The "rise of China" occurred within this friendly context, though beginning around 2010 its strategic implications began to appear more problematic with the mounting dispute over the issue of the South China Sea.

Details

Title
China, Southeast Asia, and the United States
Author
Dittmer, Lowell
Pages
111-X
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Apr 2016
Publisher
National Sun Yat-sen University
e-ISSN
24109681
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1799374457
Copyright
Copyright National Sun Yat-sen University Apr 2016