ASEAN Bulletin

The “ASEAN Bulletin” is published quarterly by the Centre on Asia and Globalisation at the National University of Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. It seeks to bring together a key summary of current news articles, reports, events, and academic publications produced in English on the three pillars of the ASEAN Community – the ASEAN Political and Security Community (APSC), the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), and the ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community (ASCC).

The ASEAN Political-Security Community: A Flawed Project in Crisis Management

By Brian Oh Seng Leong

The ASEAN Political-Security Community (APSC), which was intended to be a pillar for regional peace and political stability in Southeast Asia, has fallen short in its response to the Myanmar civil war. Originally established to promote a resilient, dynamic, and rules-based community built on shared values and norms, the APSC has been hindered by ASEAN’s traditional principles, leaving it poorly equipped to address crises that threaten not just individual members, but the entire region.

Navigating Minilateralism: Challenges and Opportunities for ASEAN

By Byron Chong

The rise of minilateralism in the Indo-Pacific presents both challenges and opportunities for the region’s key multilateral bloc, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). On one hand, the emergence of smaller, more agile coalitions poses a direct challenge to ASEAN’s much vaunted ‘centrality’ and raises questions about its continued relevance to the region’s security architecture. On the other, minilaterals could actually be the much-needed remedy for some of ASEAN’s longstanding structural deficiencies. This essay explores how ASEAN can navigate the opportunities and challenges posed by minilateralism amidst the shifting power dynamics in the Indo-Pacific.

Navigating Minilateralism: Challenges and Opportunities for ASEAN

By Byron Chong

The rise of minilateralism in the Indo-Pacific presents both challenges and opportunities for the region’s key multilateral bloc, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). On one hand, the emergence of smaller, more agile coalitions poses a direct challenge to ASEAN’s much vaunted ‘centrality’ and raises questions about its continued relevance to the region’s security architecture. On the other, minilaterals could actually be the much-needed remedy for some of ASEAN’s longstanding structural deficiencies. This essay explores how ASEAN can navigate the opportunities and challenges posed by minilateralism amidst the shifting power dynamics in the Indo-Pacific.

 

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