South Koreas Role In Building The East Asian Community
A Middle Power Advancing Regionalism
- 396 pages
- 14 hours of reading
Focusing on South Korea's role as a middle power, this work explores its potential leadership in fostering regional cooperation in East Asia, particularly post-Asian Financial Crisis. It critiques the traditional dominance of great powers like China and Japan in regionalism, proposing a multilayered analytical framework to assess South Korea's foreign policy and its contributions to regional institution and community-building. The book is valuable for scholars of international political economy and relations, offering insights into East Asian regionalism and South Korea's strategic positioning.
