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Can ASEAN Cope with “Human Insecurity” in Southeast Asia? In Search of a New ASEAN Way

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Book cover Human Insecurities in Southeast Asia

Part of the book series: Asia in Transition ((AT,volume 5))

Abstract

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN ) has developed mechanisms of managing conflicts that take place between or within its member states. Although in its earlier form, the so-called the ASEAN Way of conflict management was state-centric in its basic nature, it has been under transformation in the new transnational landscape of the region. The issue of “human insecurity” is one of the new challenges that the conventional ASEAN Way faces, demanding the protection of individual persons from the scourges of conflict and social instability. This chapter investigates and assesses to what degree ASEAN has been coping with this new challenge. To achieve this objective, it investigates how relevant concepts and documents, such as human rights , human security , responsibility to protect (R2P), the ASEAN Community and the ASEAN Charter , are becoming operationalized in the region by intergovernmental cooperation and civil society networks. Based on the insights obtained by theoretical arguments and case studies from Myanmar , the chapter concludes that ASEAN is gradually changing its basic character from “regime incubator” to “human security incubator” in order to effectively address the region’s humanitarian situations in a unique way.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    For examples, of the suffering of the ordinary people caught in intrastate conflicts and development-related conflicts in the ASEAN domain, see, Askandar et al. (2002, pp. 26–29, 32–33), Tan (2007), Nishikawa (2010) and Oishi (2011).

  2. 2.

    See, for example, ASEAN Secretariat (2007b), 1.1.7, 1.2.2 (h) and (i), and 4.14. For R2P and human security, see Bellamy and Drummond (2011, pp. 179–200).

  3. 3.

    ASEAN’s approach to regional peacekeeping forces is to forge a network of existing peacekeeping centers in Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand for expertise sharing and training based on each country’s experience from participation in the UN peacekeeping operations across the world. See, ASEAN Defence Ministers (2011).

  4. 4.

    For a discussion on ASEAN’s constructive engagement and its assessments, see, Rüland (2000 pp. 440–42); Haacke (2003, pp. 143–46).

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Correspondence to Mikio Oishi .

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Oishi, M. (2016). Can ASEAN Cope with “Human Insecurity” in Southeast Asia? In Search of a New ASEAN Way. In: Carnegie, P., King, V., Zawawi Ibrahim (eds) Human Insecurities in Southeast Asia. Asia in Transition, vol 5. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-2245-6_7

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