Climate Change: Just as Dangerous for South East Asia
In: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Commentaries No. 104/2013
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In: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Commentaries No. 104/2013
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In: The Diplomat: ASEAN Beat, Forthoming
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Working paper
In: Global Asia V7N3 Fall: Feature Essays, 2012
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In: ASEAN-Korea Relations: Security, Trade, and Community Building edited by Ho Khai Leong. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2007
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In: Issues and Insights, Pacific Forum CSIS, Vol. 6, No. 3, 2006
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In: International Studies No.16 6/2005 - Institute for Foreign Policy and Strategic Studies
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In: International Studies No.17, December 2005 - Institute for Foreign Policy and Strategic Studies
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In: International Studies No.15, December 2004 - Institute for Foreign Policy and Strategic Studies
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In: The world today, Volume 68, Issue 3, p. 21
ISSN: 0043-9134
This is an old Southeast Asian saying: "We are like the grass between two elephants. We will be crushed underfoot regardless of whether they fight or make love." This saying is much repeated these days now that the United States and China are in open competition in the Asia-Pacific region. By taking advantage of American and Chinese desires to engage in the region, Southeast Asia can become a champion of non-traditional security issues such as water resource management and countering climate change -- issues that must be solved by collective action among states. These are not the traditional "hard security" domain of the neo-realists. Adapted from the source document.
In: The world today, Volume 68, Issue 3, p. 21-22
ISSN: 0043-9134
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