1st Edition
Neoliberalism and Conflict In Asia After 9/11
1. Globalization, Conflict and Political Regimes in East and Southeast Asia Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison 2. Neoliberalistm and the Future World: Markets and the End of Politics Richard Robison 3. After Neoliberal Globalization: The "Securitization of U.S. Foreign Economic Policy in East Asia Richard Higgott 4. U.S. Hegemony and Southeast Asia: The Impact of, and Limits to, U.S. Power and Influence Mark Beeson 5. APEC, Globalization, and 9/11: The Debate on What Constitutes Asian Regionalism Ian Taylor 6. International Capital, Singapore’s State Companies, and Security Garry Rodan 6. The Antipolitics of Good Governance: From Global Social Policy to a Global Populism? Kanishka Jayasuriya and Kevin Hewison 7. Political Regimes and Development Assistance: The Political Economy of Aid Selectivity Wil Hout 8. The Arroyo Government and ‘Civil Society’ Participation in the Philippines: Neoliberalism, Political Alliances, and Succession [note: this chapter was not included in the Special Issue, but is to be included in the book] Ben Reid 9. Indonesian Local Party Politics: A Site of Resistance to Neoliberal Reform Vedi R. Hadiz 10. Full Circle? Rural Land Reforms in Globalizing China Sally Sargeson 11. Globalization, International Coalitions, and Domestic Reform Shaun Breslin
Biography
Garry Rodan is the Director of the Asia Research Centre and Professor of Politics and International Studies at Murdoch University, Perth, Australia.
Kevin Hewison is the Director of Carolina Asia Centre at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He was previously the Director of the Southeast Asia Research Centre at the City University of Hong Kong.
"The 12 essays presented by Rodan and Hewison examine social, economic, and political conflict in Asia at the current moment of neoliberal capitalism. The first group of essays, premised on the notion that market systems are inherently political and conflict-ridden, analyzes the changing nature of capitalist market systems in East and Southeast Asia. Topics in this section include the “securitization of US foreign economic policy in East Asia; debate over what constitutes Asian regionalism; and the relationship between international capital, Singapore’s state companies, and security. The next section focuses on forms of conflict involving domestic and political institutions and governance mechanisms for suppressing contestation of neoliberalism. Specific issues include rural land reform in China, neoliberalism and political alliances in the Philippines, Indonesian local party politics, and the political economy of developmental aid selectivity." --Reference & Research Book News






