Democratisation, Governance and Regionalism in East and Southeast Asia

Hardcover
from $0.00

Author: Ian Marsh

ISBN-10: 0415376238

ISBN-13: 9780415376235

Category: General Asian History

Search in google:

This new collection of essays compares the development of central institutions of governance in the emerging democracies of East and South East Asia. Seven key countries are covered: Taiwan, Korea, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. Save for Singapore and Malaysia, all have democratized over the past decade. Because of its constitutive implications for citizen identities, democratization is arguably of even greater potential significance than the economic take-off that preceded it. But there are distinctive features that give the experience of these seven states especial relevance. First, unlike analogous western patterns, democratic transitions in Asia have been top-down in character. Second, the implementation of basic democratic forms was highly compressed in time. Third there were (and are), in most countries, no major ideological or programmatic cleavages. Thus the bases around which contending political forces might organize are not immediately clear. This may affect the outlook for partisanship and mobilization. There has been no synoptic, comparative study of these developments on a region-wide scale. This book fills the gap extremely well.

1Introduction12Political culture and democratic consolidation in East and Southeast Asia193Parties and party systems in East and Southeast Asia494The national executives in East and Southeast Asia895Bureaucratic performance, policy capacity and administrative reform1236Economic governance and global engagement : independent and dependent linkage1527Regionalism and state capacity in East Asia1778Has the Japanese model ceased to be a magnet in Asia?2049Citizens' values in East and Southeast Asia22310Democratisation, regionalism and state capacity in East and Southeast Asia247