Regionalism in Comparative Perspective
- 29 June 1996
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Cooperation and Conflict
- Vol. 31 (2), 123-159
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0010836796031002001
Abstract
Processes of globalization are occurring in a world marked by processes of regional integration that are comparable though different. Integration processes in both Asia and Europe are open to global forces and marked by multiple centres of influence. In Asia, integration processes occur in informal and inclusive network structures. This contrasts with the more formal and exclusive pattern that characterizes the integration process among continental European states. Our analysis of international politics could be enriched if it took more account of these emerging structures in different world regions.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Pacific WayForeign Affairs, 1995
- An Asia‐Pacific community as a regional order: Possibilities and limitations of APECAsia-Pacific Review, 1995
- Economic Integration within Greater China: Trade and Investment Flows Between China, Hong Kong and TaiwanThe China Quarterly, 1993
- Greater China: A New Economic Colossus?The Washington Quarterly, 1993
- The Asianization of AsiaForeign Affairs, 1993
- The East Asian economic groupingThe Pacific Review, 1991
- For a Unified History of the World in the Twentieth CenturyRadical History Review, 1987
- The Regional Subsystem: A Conceptual Explication and a Propositional InventoryInternational Studies Quarterly, 1973
- The Analysis of Regional International Politics: The Integration Versus the Empirical Systems ApproachInternational Organization, 1973
- Hierarchical Regional Systems and the Politics of System BoundariesInternational Organization, 1972