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Asian Security Studies: New Titles and Key Backlist 2009 Catalogue for European, Asian, African and Australian Markets from Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.

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Page 1: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

ROUTLEDGE

ASIAN SECURITYSTUDIES 2009

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

TEXTBOOK 2nd Edition

Constructing a Security Community in Southeast AsiaASEAN and the Problem of Regional Order

Amitav Acharya, University of Bristol, UK

Series: Politics in Asia

Review for the first edition:

’This is a superb study of ASEAN and themain issues that it faces. Acharyaprovides great insight into key episodesin ASEAN’s development with thoroughresearch and cogent analysis...This bookmust now be considered theauthoritative text on the subject ofregional organization in Southeast Asia.One hopes the author will consider asecond edition in the not too distantfuture.’ – Journal of the Humanities andSocial Sciences of Southeast Asia andOceania

This second edition of Constructing aSecurity Community in Southeast Asia takesthe excellent framework from Acharya’s firstedition and brings it up-to-date, looking atASEAN’s comprehensive and critical account

of the evolution of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) normsand the viability of the ASEAN way of conflict management. Key issues indetermining the future stability of the Southeast Asian and Asia Pacific regionare covered, including:

•the effect of expansion

•the application of the ASEAN model of conflict management to the wider Asia Pacific region

•territorial disputes in the South China Sea

•domestic instability in Burma and Cambodia

•military acquisitions on intra-regional relations.

Including additional material on ASEAN’s response to terrorism in the wake ofthe War on Terror and the proposal for an ASEAN security community, this newedition will continue to appeal to students and scholars of Asian security,international relations theory and Southeast Asian studies.

Selected Contents: Introduction: Security Communities and ASEAN in TheoreticalPerspective 1. Constructing Security Communities 2. The Evolution of ASEAN Normsand the Emergence of the ‘ASEAN Way’ 3. ASEAN and the Cambodia Conflict: ARegional Solution to a Regional Problem? 4. Extending ASEAN Norms: Benefits andBurdens of ASEAN-Ten 5. Managing Intra-Regional Relations 6. ASEAN and Asia PacificSecurity: Limits of the ASEAN Way? 7. The ‘ASEAN Security Community’: Idea ShapingReality? Conclusion: Remaking ASEANApril 2009: 234 x 156: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-41428-9: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-41429-6: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-93923-9• AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Handbook of Asian Security StudiesEdited by: Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA, Andrew Scobell, Texas A&M University, USA, Joseph Liow, NanyangTechnological University, Singapore

Despite the richness and complexity of security issues in Asia, and the theoreticaland conceptual debates these have spawned, there is no single volume thatscholars can turn to for succinct, cogent and dispassionate analysis of theseissues. The Handbook of Asian Security Studies addresses this important gap inthe literature.

There is no denying the growing strategic significance of Asia to the globalstrategic order. The rapid growth of China, and now India, promises to shift theglobal distribution of power in the direction of Asia and poses potentialchallenges to US strategic pre-eminence in the 21st century. In addition, Japan’spost-World War II pacifist disposition in international and regional security affairsis coming under increasing strain in the domestic political sphere as pressuremounts for Tokyo to assume a more activist role as it returns to 'normalstatehood'. In response to these shifts – both real and potential, and in anattempt to avert the rivalry that neorealists are predicting for the region –Southeast Asia has attempted to actively engage these major powers,positioning itself and its much-vaunted 'ASEAN Way' as a model for regionalorder and stability.

Apart from the possible shift in global power structures and its conflict-ladenpossibilities, the region is also fraught with every conceivable form of conflict,ranging from unresolved territorial disputes (maritime and inland), irredentistclaims, intra-state conflicts, transnational terrorist movements and nuclearrivalries. The region is also the site of several states on the verge of failure andothers in the incipient stage of national construction.

The significance of this volume lies not only in its considered exploration ofsecurity dynamics in the three distinct subregions that make up “Asia”, but alsoin its attempt to bridge the study of these regions themselves by exploring thegeopolitical interstices that link each of them. This is done through the set ofessays under the section titled 'Cross- Regional Issues', which essentiallyinvestigate and analyze security issues and challenges which cut across thegeopolitical boundaries of the three regions and/or tie them together.

This volume contains essays by many leading scholars in the field and will beessential reading for all students of Asian security, Asian politics, andInternational Relations in general.Selected Contents: Editors' Introduction Sumit Ganguly, Joseph Liow and Andrew Scobell Part 1: South East Asia 1. Islamist Violence in Southeast Asia AmyFreedman 2. Internal Conflicts in Southeast Asia Kristen Schulze 3. ASEAN andRegional Security Michael Malley 4. Maritime Security in Southeast Asia Ralf Emmers5. Great Power Politics and Southeast Asian Security Joey Long 6. The Future ofBurma/Myanmar Mary Callahan 7. Intra-ASEAN Tensions Part 2: East Asia 8. China’sRise: How Peaceful? Andrew Scobell 9. Japan’s Security Future Sheila Smith 10. TheSecurity of the Korean Peninsula David Kang 11. The Taiwan Issue Richard Bush 12. TheTibetan Question June Teufel Dreyer 13. The Shanghai Cooperation Organization and ItsImplications for Regional Security Bates Gill Part 3: South Asia 4. The Indo-PakistaniConflict and Kashmir Sumit Ganguly 15. Pakistan’s Strategic Future Stephen P. Cohen16. The Sino-Indian Rivalry John Garver 17. Insurgency, Instability and the Quest forSecurity in Afghanistan Christine Fair 18. The Sri Lankan Civil War Neil Devotta19. Nuclear Weapons and Crisis Stability in South Asia Devin Hagerty Part 4: CrossRegional Issues 20. The Nuclear Question in Asia 21. Great Power Rivalry in AsiaAaron Freidberg 22. Maritime Rivalry in Asia 23. Space Rivalry in Asia Joan Johnson-Freese 24. The ASEAN Regional Forum Sheldon Simon. ConclusionJune 2009: 246 x 174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-77781-0: £95.00

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New Titlesand

Key Series

Page 2: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Routledge Security in Asia Pacific Series

Series Editors: Leszek Buszynski,International University of Japan and William Tow, Australian National University,Canberra, Australia

This series puts forward important new work onkey security issues in the region. It embraces theroles of the major actors, their defense policiesand postures and their security interaction overthe key issues of the region.

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

South Asia’s Nuclear SecurityBhumitra ChakmaApril 2010: 234 x 156Hb: 978-0-415-49449-6: £80.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

The East Asian Security CommunityDonna WeeksNovember 2009: 234 x 156Hb: 978-0-415-49448-9:

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

American Sanctions in the Asia-PacificBrendan Taylor, Australian National University,Australia

Provides a comprehensive assessment of USsanctions policy in the Asia-Pacific, examining USsanctions policy toward China, Japan, North Korea,India/Pakistan, Taiwan, Indonesia and Myanmar. Ineach case it discusses why sanctions wereemployed, what the expectations were, howsanctions operated in practice, and how effectivethey were.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The SanctionsDebate – An Overview 3. China 4. Japan 5. NorthKorea 6. India/Pakistan 7. Taiwan 8. Indonesia 9. Myanmar 10. Summary and ConclusionsNovember 2009: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-42350-2: £75.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Asia’s Nuclear FuturesChung Min Lee, National University of Singapore,Singapore

This volume provides a comprehensive assessmentof the role of nuclear weapons in Asia since 1945,its implications for regional and global security, andthe conditions under which more Asian countriesmight seek to acquire a nuclear capability in thefuture.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Proliferation NetworksPreface. Introduction 1. Nuclear Weapons in Asia andProliferation Networks Part 2: Nuclear Pandora’s Arc2. Proliferation Before and After the A.Q. Khan Network3. Failed States and Nuclear Weapons Part 3: TippingPoints and New Security Dilemmas 4. Tipping Points:Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan 5. Deterrence and NewSecurity Dilemmas Part 4: A Brave New World? 6. Nuclear Proliferation in Asia and Consequences forGlobal SecurityNovember 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-42825-5: £75.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Human Security in Southeast AsiaYukiko Nishikawa, Mahidol University, Thailand

This book explores the theoretical and conceptualbasis of human security, and shows how it has beentaken up as a central part of security policy in bothindividual states in southeast Asia and in regionalsecurity policy within ASEAN.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Human Security: ANew Label for Old Challenges? 2. Southeast Asia at aTurning Point 3. Domestic Challenges for HumanSecurity 4. Regional Challenges for Human Security 5. The ASEAN Way and Human Security. ConclusionOctober 2009: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-47868-7: £80.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

The China-India-Pakistan StrategicRelationshipAshok Kapur, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

This book traces the triangular strategic relationshipof India, Pakistan and China over the second half ofthe twentieth century, showing how two enmities –Sino-Indian and Indo-Pakistani – and one friendship– Sino-Pakistani – defined the distribution of powerand the patterns of relationships in a major centreof gravity of international conflict and internationalchange.

Selected Contents: 1. Importance of Subject 2. China-India-Pakistan as a Strategic Triangle: Overview 3. Originsof the Triangle: Context, Motives and Behaviour, 1950s –Early 1960s 4. The Triangle at Work in War – 1962,1965, 1971 5. China and Pakistan Nuclearize theTriangle, 1970s – Present, and India Joins the NuclearGame (1998) 6. Late 1990s – Present. China Adapts itsStyle and Makes Few Minor Policy Changes 7. TheFuture: Adapting or Learning from the PastAugust 2009: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-45466-7: £75.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

ASEAN RegionalismCo-operation, Values and Institutionalisation

Christopher Roberts, University of Canberra,Australia

This book examines the key motivations for andchallenges to greater regional integration inSoutheast Asia. It covers the full range of issuesconfronting ASEAN at present, and the full range ofASEAN countries, and discusses both developmentsin ASEAN to date and also likely futuredevelopments.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Security, Identityand Cooperation in International Relations 2. The Rise ofSoutheast Asia and the Search for Regional Order 3. ASEAN Into the Third Decade: Institutional Responses,Exogenous Engagement and Membership Expansion 4. Thailand, the Philippines and Indonesia: DomesticDevelopments and Regional Effects 5. Myanmar inASEAN: A Challenge to Cohesion and the ASEAN Way?6. Contemporary Challenges: The Limits to Economic andSecurity Cooperation 7. Regionalism Anew? InstitutionalResponses and their Limitations. Conclusion: Retrospectand Prospects July 2009: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-49001-6: £80.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Political Change, DemocraticTransitions and Security inSoutheast AsiaEdited by Mely Caballero-Anthony, NanyangTechnological University, Singapore

The fragility of democracy in Southeast Asia is amatter of growing concern. This book examines thenature of political transitions in Southeast Asia andwhy political transitions toward politicalliberalisation and democracy have failed to take off.It considers political systems in the region that havegone through significant periods of transition butcontinue to face serious challenges towarddemocratic consolidation.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction. Political Changeand Political Development in Southeast Asia: TransitologyRevisited Mely Caballero-Anthony 2. Cambodia: TheCallenge for Democratic Consolidation in Post-WarSocieties Sorpong Peou 3. Political Transition andDemocratic Resilience in Indonesia Rizal Sukma4. Unpacking the Nature of Political Transitions inMalaysia Lee Hock Guan and Helen E S Nesadurai5. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum:The Travails of Democratization in the Philippines HermanKraft 6. What Happened to Thai Democracy? ThitinanPongsudhirak 7. Understanding Network Autocracy:Consolidating Singapore’s Political System Cherian George8. Conclusion. Reflections on Nature of the PoliticalChange in Southeast Asia Mely Caballero-AnthonyJune 2009: 234 x 156Hb: 978-0-415-49353-6: £80.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Geopolitics and Maritime TerritorialDisputes in East AsiaRalf Emmers, Nanyang Technological University,Singapore

Focussed on geopolitics in East Asia, particulary on EastAsia’s contentious maritime territorial disputes, this bookexamines how important factors including territory, naturalresources and power relations influence state behaviour andrelations between important powers including the UnitedStates, China, Japan and South Korea.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. GeopoliticalConsiderations in International Relations 2. GeopoliticalConsiderations of the Claimant States 3. The Tokdo/Takeshima Dispute 4. The Senkaku/Diao yu Dispute 5. TheSpratly and Paracel Disputes. Concluding Chapter: TowardConflict Management May 2009: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-46942-5: £75.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Japan’s Peace Building Diplomacy in AsiaPeng Er Lam, National University of Singapore,Singapore

This book examines Japan’s emerging identity as animportant participant in conflict prevention andpeacebuilding in Southeast and South Asia,demonstrating that Japan has increasingly sought apositive and active political role commensurate withits economic pre-eminence.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Conflict Preventionand Peace-Building: Theory and Practice 2. Peacekeeping,Brokering and Sustaining Peace in Cambodia 3. Peacemaking and the Consolidating Peace in Aceh 4. Peace-Building in Sri Lanka 5. Peacekeeping andNation Building in East Timor 6. Muddling Through inMindanao 7. Pursuing Elusive Peace in Afghanistan 8. Conclusion: Conflict Prevention and Peace-Building – Japan’s Diplomatic Niche?March 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-41320-6: £75.00

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Page 3: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

North Korea’s Military-DiplomaticCampaignsA Case of Calculated Adventurism

Narushige Michishita, National Institute forDefense Studies, Japan

This book examines North Korea’s nuclear strategyover a long time period from the early 1960s,setting the nuclear strategy in the wider context ofNorth Korea’s military and diplomatic campaigns toachieve its political goals.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Origins andDevelopment of Calculated Adventurism 2. ChangingStrategic Equation on the Korean Peninsula 3. Genesis ofthe Calculated Adventurism, 1966-1972: The PuebloIncident, 1968 4. Limited Use of Force, 1973-1992: WestSea Incident, 1973-74, and The Axe Murder Incident,1976 5. Strategic Coercion, 1993-2000: The First NuclearDiplomacy, 1993-94, and Missile Diplomacy and theSecond West Sea Incident, 1998-2000 6. The SecondNuclear Diplomacy and its Outlook 7. Conclusion -Effectiveness and Limits of the Calculated AdventurismMarch 2009: 234 x 156: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-44943-4: £75.00

NEW

Security and International Politicsin the South China SeaTowards a Co-operative Management Regime

Edited by Sam Bateman and Ralf Emmers, both atNanyang Technological University, Singapore

The South China Sea has long been regarded as amajor source of tension in East Asia. This bookexamines international politics and security in theSouth China Sea, exploring the history of thedisputes, attempts to resolve them, and newsecurity threats including piracy, terrorism, resourceand environmental management.

Selected Contents: Introduction Sam Bateman and RalfEmmers Part 1: Geopolitics in the South China Sea1. Dangerous Ground: A Geo-Political Overview of theSouth China Sea Clive Schofield 2. The South China SeaDispute: An International History Geoffrey Till 3. Maritime Territorial Disputes and their Impact onMaritime Strategy – A Historical Perspective Bruce A.Elleman Part 2: Non-Traditional Security Issues in theSouth China Sea 4. Fisheries Management in the SouthChina Sea David Rosenberg 5. Cooperative Developmentof the Oil and Gas Resources in the South China Sea ZouKeyuan Part 3: Politics and Security in the SouthChina Sea 6. Southeast Asia and the South China SeaDispute Christopher Chung 7. Sovereignty in ASEAN andThe Problem of Maritime Cooperation in the South ChinaSea Mak Joon Nam 8. The De-escalation of the SpratlyDispute in Sino-Southeast Asian Relations Ralf Emmers 9. China’s South China Sea Dilemma: BalancingSovereignty, Development, and Security Li Mingjiang 10. China and Joint Development in the South China Sea:An Energy security Perspective Lee Lai To & ChenShaofeng Part 4: Towards a Co-operativeManagement Regime 11. The South China Sea – TheLong Road Towards Peace and Cooperation Hasjim Djalal12. The Contribution of the South China Sea Workshops– Importance of a Functional Approach Ian Townsend-Gault 13. The Declaration on the Conduct of Parties inthe South China Sea Nguyen Hong Thao 14. LegalRegimes for Cooperation in the South China Sea RobertC. Beckman. Conclusion: The Prospects for aCooperative Management Regime Sam BatemanDecember 2008: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-46943-2: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88524-6

NEW

Human Security in East AsiaChallenges for Collaborative Action

Edited by Sorpong Peou, Sophia University, Japan

This book explores human security in East Asia,focusing especially on the challenges ofcoordination and collaboration among actorsinvolved in securing and promoting human security.It includes detailed case studies of militaryinterventions in East Asia, including East Timor, andalso non-military interventions, includinginternational criminal justice in Cambodia.

Selected Contents: Introduction: Collaborative ActionProblems in Human Security Sorpong Peou Part 1: Human Security: Theoretical & ConceptualContentions 1. Critical Challenges for Globalism inHuman Security Studies Sorpong Peou 2. The WesternIntellectual Roots of Human Security Richmond Oliver 3. East vs. West? Debate & Convergence on HumanSecurity Akiko Fukushima 4. Southeast Asia’s Points ofConvergence On International Intervention MelyCaballero-Anthony Part 2: Collaborative Action onHuman Security in East Asia 5. Human Security inExtremis: East-Asian Reactions to the Responsibility toProtect Paul M. Evans 6. East Asia’s Challenges to &Changes in The Peace Operations in East Timor MaikoIchihara 7. The Limits of Collaborative Action onInternational Criminal Justice in East Asia Sorpong Peou8. The Neo-liberalization of Security & Violence inCambodia Simon Springer. Conclusion: Human Security& Policy Implications For Future Collaborative Action November 2008: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-46796-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88863-6

NEW

Pakistan’s Nuclear WeaponsBhumitra Chakma, University of Hull, UK

Provides a comprehensive study of a nuclear-armedPakistan, investigating the implications of itsemergence as a nuclear weapons state.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Pakistan’sNuclearisation Process: Proliferation Lessons and the riseof the second nuclear age 3. Pakistan’s Emerging NuclearPosture and Doctrinal Contemplation 4. Pakistan’sNuclear Deterrent: Force Level and Missile Capabilities 5. Command and Control System 6. Pakistan and theGlobal Non-proliferation Regime 7. Proliferation ControlChallenges, Nuclear Terrorism, and Pakistan 8. ConclusionAugust 2008: 234 x 156: 190ppHb: 978-0-415-40871-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89223-7

Securing Southeast AsiaThe Politics of Security Sector Reform

Mark Beeson, University of Birmingham, UK andAlex Bellamy, University of Queensland, Australia

This book applies the security reform agenda toSoutheast Asia. It investigates recent developmentsin civil-military relations in the region, looking inparticular at the impact and utility of the agenda onthe region and assessing whether it is likely to helpmake the region more stable and less prone tomilitary interventions.

Selected Contents: Acknowledgements. Introduction1. Security Sector Reform in a Southeast Asian Context2. Civil-Military Relations and Institutional Change 3. TheHistorical Origins of Southeast Asian Security 4. Malaysia:Constitutionalism Corrupted? 5. Thailand: Military Rule,There and Back Again? 6. Indonesia: From Concordanceto Constitutionalism? 7. The Philippines: The Politics ofPolyarchy? Conclusion. References 2007: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-41619-1: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93488-3

Australia as an Asia-PacificRegional PowerFriendships in Flux?

Edited by Brendan Taylor, Australian NationalUniversity, Australia

This book considers the changing nature ofAustralia’s identity and role in the Asia-Pacific, andthe forces behind these developments, withparticular attention towards security alignments andalliance relationships.

Selected Contents: Foreword Coral Bell Part 1: Layingthe Table 1. Introduction Brendan Taylor 2. Alliancesand Alignments in the Twenty-First Century William TowPart 2: Dining with Giants 3. Australia–United StatesPaul Dibb 4. Australia–Japan Brendan Taylor andDesmond Ball 5. Australia–China Michael Wesley 6. Australia–India Sandy Gordon Part 3: Working theRoom 7. Australia–Indonesia Allan Gyngell 8. Australia–South Pacific Hugh White 9. Australia–NewZealand Robert Ayson 10. Australia–Singapore RonHuisken Part 4: Washing Up 11. Threats withoutEnemies: Are Australia’s Alliances and Alignments StillRelevant? Christopher Chung 12. Australia’s ChangingAlliances and Alignments: Towards a New DiplomaticTwo-Step? Pauline Kerr and Shannon Tow 2007: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-40421-1: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-94012-9

Energy Security in AsiaEdited by Michael Wesley, Asia Institute, GriffithUniversity, Australia

Selected Contents: 1. The Geopolitics of Energy Security2. The United States and Energy Security in Asia 3. China’s Energy Security 4. Japan’s Energy Security 5. India’s Energy Security 6. OPEC and Asia’s EnergySecurity 7. Russia and Central Asia and Asia’s EnergySecurity 8. Australia and Asia’s Energy Security 9. TheStrategic Dimensions of Energy Security in Asia 10. TheEconomic Dimensions of Energy Security in Asia 11. Energy Security and Environmental Security in Asia12. Energy Security and Human Security 2006: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-41006-9: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-64616-8

Regional Co-operation and ItsEnemies in Northeast AsiaThe Impact of Domestic Forces

Edited by Edward Friedman, University ofWisconsin, USA and Sung Chull Kim, HiroshimaCity University, Japan

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Domestic Politicsand Regional Cooperation in Southeast and NortheastAsia 3. An Emerging Northeast Asian Community:Domestic Dimension to Consider 4. Washington’s Policiestoward North Korea and the Taiwan Strait: The Role of USDomestic Politics 5. Two Koreas in Northeast Asia:Linkages between Domestic, Inter-Korean, and RegionalPolitics 6. The Transformation of Chinese Foreign Policy7. The Fragility of China’s Regional Cooperation 8. StateConsolidation and Foreign Policy in Russia 9. MediatingGeopolitics, Markets, Regionalism: Domestic Politics inJapan’s Post Cold War Relations with China 10. Transnational Cooperation among NGOs in NortheastAsia: From Re-Thinking Development towards Re-Thinking Security 11. Conclusion 2006: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-39922-7: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96870-3

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Page 4: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Routledge Security in Asia Pacific Continued..

Japan, Australia and Asia-PacificSecurityEdited by Brad Williams, National University ofSingapore, Singapore and Andrew Newman,Embassy of Australia, Washington DC, USA

Selected Contents: Foreword Alison Tokita and YasushiAkashi. Introduction: The US and UN in Australia-JapanDefence and Security Cooperation Andrew Newman andBrad Williams 1. Australia, Japan and the Region, 1952-1965: The Beginnings of Security Policy Networks DavidWalton 2. Japan, Australia and ASPAC: The Rise and Fallof an Asia-Pacific Cooperative Security FrameworkChristopher Braddick 3. Japanese Security Perceptions ofAustralia Naoko Sajima 4. ‘The Anchors’: CollaborativeSecurity, Substance or Smokescreen? William Tow andRussell Trood 5. American Acolytes: Tokyo, Canberra andWashington’s Emerging ’Pacific Axis’ Purnendra Jain andJohn Bruni 6. Australia-Japan Security Cooperation: TheProliferation Security Initiative Andrew Newman and BradWilliams 7. Japan and the War on Terror: OpportunityCosts David Wright-Neville 8. Perspectives on UNPeacekeeping Collaboration between Japan and AustraliaKatsumi Ishizuka 9. Security Cooperation between Japanand Australia: Current Elements and Future ProspectsDesmond Ball2006: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-38139-0: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96808-6

Bush and AsiaAmerica’s Evolving Relations with East Asia

Edited by Mark Beeson, University of Birmingham, UK

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. AmericanAscendancy: Conceptualizing Contemporary Hegemony2. The United States and East Asia: How Much Does theBush Revolution Matter? 3. US Economic Relations withEast Asia: From Hegemony to Complex Interdependence?4. The US and Asian Regionalism 5. Bush and Asia: TheEvolving Strategic Context

Cases: 6. China’s Response to the Bush Doctrine: FourMore Years 7. Japan and the Bush Agenda: Alignment ofDivergence? 8. Thailand and the United States: BeyondHegemony? 9. Bush and the Philippines After 9/11:Hegemony, Mutual Opportunism and Democratic Retreat10. The United States and Indonesia: Arrogance Past andPresent 11. Malaysia and the United States: RejectingDominance, Embracing Engagement 12. TheContradictions of Hawk-Engagement: US Security PolicyTowards Korea in the Bush Era 13. With Friends LikeThese: Reassessing the Australia-US Relationship.Bibliography. Index2006: 234 x 156: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-38333-2: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96507-8

Routledge Security in Asia Series

The aim of this series is to publish original,high-quality work by both new and establishedscholars in the West and the East, on all aspectsof security in Asia.

Maritime Security in Southeast AsiaEdited by Kwa Chong Guan, IDSS, NanyangTechnological University, Singapore andJohn Skogan, Norwegian Institute for InternationalAffairs, Norway

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Southeast-AsianSLOCs and Security Options 2. Re-Thinking the Safety ofNavigation in the Malacca Straits Challenges 3. TheImportance and Security of Regional Sea Lanes 4. TheRegional Dimension of Territorial and Maritime Disputesin Southeast Asia: Actors, Disagreements and Dynamics5. Maritime Disputes in the South China Sea: Strategicand Diplomatic Status Quo 6. Piracy in the Waters ofSoutheast Asia 7. Maritime Terrorist Threat in SoutheastAsia Responses 8. Building Good Order at Sea inSoutheast Asia: The Promise of International Regimes 9. Archipelagic Sea Lanes Passage in Southeast Asia:Developments and Uncertainties 10. The US RegionalMaritime Security Initiative and US Grand Strategy inSoutheast Asia 11. Satellite-Based Tracking of Ships asGlobal Crime Control: ISPS Code, AIS, SSAS and LRIT 12. Flags of Convenience as a Complicating Factor inCombating Crime at Sea Comments and Reflections13. Terrorism at Sea: Combating What - and How? 14. Reflections on the Changing Maritime SecurityEnvironment Afterword 15. The Important Role ofShipping: Challenges Ahead 2007: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-41388-6: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96441-5

Taiwan’s Defense ReformEdited by Martin Edmonds, University of Lancaster,UK and Michael M. Tsai, Taiwan’s Vice Minister of Defense

Selected Contents: Part 1: TheChallenge of Defense ReformIntroduction: Taiwan’s DefenseReform 1. Taiwan’s DefenseReform: Questions andObservations Part 2: TheExternal Threat: MainlandChina 2. China’s Military Threatto Taiwan in the 21st Century:Coercion or Capture? 3. China’sMilitary Modernization andTaiwan’s Defense Reform:Programs, Problems, and

Prospects Part 3: The Domestic Context of DefenseReform 4. An Overview of Taiwan’s Defense Reform 5. Civilian Roles in Defense Policy-Making 6. An Analysisof the ROC’s Military Organization and Force Structure 7. The Development of Taiwan’s Revolution in MilitaryAffairs after the Implementation of the 2002 NationalDefense Act Part 4: The Role of the US in Taiwan’sDefense Reform 8. The Role of the United States inTaiwan’s Defense Reform 9. Arming Taiwan for theFuture: Prospects and Problems Part 5: SpecificDefense Reform Issues 10. Funding for Taiwan’sDefense Reform 11. The Republic of China ArmedServices’ Human Resource Policy 12. Taiwan’s MilitaryEducation and Defense Reform 2005: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-36802-5: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-02773-8

Asia Pacific Security - Values andIdentityLeszek Buszynski2004: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-30671-3: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-40616-1: £20.00 eBook: 978-0-203-47633-8

Taiwan’s Security and Air PowerTaiwan’s Defense Against the Air Threat fromMainland China

Edited by Martin Edmonds, University of Lancaster,UK and Michael Tsai, Taiwan’s Vice Minister of Defense

Foreword by ROCAF General Yang-Jou Shiah2003: 234 x 156: 216ppHb: 978-0-415-32317-8: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-31643-6

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Page 5: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Asian Security Studies

Series Editors: Sumit Ganguly, IndianaUniversity, Bloomington, USA and Andrew Scobell

Few regions of the world are fraught with asmany security questions as Asia. Within thisregion it is possible to study great powerrivalries, irredentist conflicts, nuclear and ballisticmissile proliferation, secessionist movements,ethnoreligious conflicts and inter-state wars. Thisseries publishes the best possible scholarship onthe security issues affecting the region, andincludes detailed empirical studies, theoreticallyoriented case studies and policy-relevant analysesas well as more general works.

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Pakistan’s SecurityThe Insecure State

Shaun Gregory, Bradford University, UK

This is an in-depth analysis of the contemporarysecurity of Pakistan – now one of the mostimportant states in the world in terms ofinternational security.

Selected Contents: 1. Inside the Pakistani State 2. Federalism and Pakistani State Security 3. Terrorism inPakistan 4. The Great Enemy: Pakistan and India 5. Pakistani Security in Regional Context 6. Great PowerRivalry and Pakistan 7. Securing the Insecure StateOctober 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-40573-7: £70.00

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Cooperative Security in the Asia-PacificThe ASEAN Regional Forum

Edited by Jürgen Haacke, London School ofEconomics and Political Science, University ofLondon, UK and Noel M. Morada, University of thePhilippines Diliman, Quezon City, The Philippines

This book provides an in-depth and comprehensivestudy of the ASEAN Regional Forum, and itsactivities in promoting regional security after 9/11.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Jürgen Haacke andNoel M. Morada 2. Origins and Development Noel M.Morada 3. ASEAN Perspectives Rizal Sukma 4. US,Japanese and Australian Perspectives on the ARF KunikoAshizawa 5. China’s Perspective on the ARF ChristopherR. Hughes 6. Securitization and the ARF’s Discourse onTransnational Challenges Jürgen Haacke 7. Dynamics ofSecuritization: Terrorism M.C. Abad 8. Dynamics ofSecuritization: Maritime Threats J.N. Mak 9. Failures toSecuritize Herman Kraft 10. Liberalization and RegionalSecurity Jörn Dosch 11. Conclusion: Fusing AgendasNoel M. Morada and Jürgen HaackeApril 2009: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-46052-1: £65.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

India and CounterinsurgencyLessons Learned

Edited by Sumit Ganguly and David P. Fidler,both at Indiana University, Bloomington, USA

Filling a clear gap in the literature, this book focuseson India’s experiences waging counterinsurgencycampaigns since its independence in 1947. Itaddresses the pressing military and civilian needs inthe counterinsurgency arena by focusing on thelessons that can be learned by other states fromIndia’s extensive endeavours.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Part 1: India’sCounterinsurgency Campaigns in the Northeast2. India’s Counterinsurgency Campaign in Nagaland3. India’s Counterinsurgency Campaign in Mizoram 4. Insights from the Northeast: Counterinsurgency inNagaland and Mizoram Part 2: Kashmir, Punjab, andthe Naxalites 5. Insurgency, Proxy War, and Terrorism inKashmir 6. Slow Learning: Lessons from India’sCounterinsurgency Operations in Kashmir 7. India’sCounterinsurgency Campaign in Punjab - Ved Marwah 8. Lessons from India’s Experience in the Punjab, 1978-1993 9. Counterinsurgency Against Naxalites in IndiaPart 3: Beyond India’s Shores: Counterinsurgency inSri Lanka 10. India’s Counterinsurgency Campaign in SriLanka 11. The Indian Peacekeeping Force Experience andU.S. Stability Operations in the Twenty-First Century Part 4: Counterinsurgency Doctrine 12. The IndianArmy’s Counterinsurgency Doctrine 13. The IndianDoctrine on Sub-Conventional Operations: Reflectionsfrom a U.S. Counterinsurgency Perspective 14. ConclusionApril 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-49103-7: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-87920-7

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Managing the China ChallengeGlobal Perspectives

Edited by Quansheng Zhao, American University,Washington, USA and Guoli Liu, CharlestonCollege, USA

This edited volume addressesone of the most significantissues in internationalstrategic studies today: howto meet the challenge of arising China?

Selected Contents:Part 1: Understanding theChina Challenge 1. ChinaRising: Theoretical Understandingand Global Response QuanshengZhao and Guoli Liu 2. China’s

Rise in Historical Perspective Warren I. Cohen3. Exploring Theoretical Implications of the Rise of China:A Critique on Mainstream IR Perspectives Yun-han Chuand Min-Hua Huang 4. China’s Rise as a Trading PowerGuoli Liu Part 2: Perspectives from the Globe 5. U.S.Response to the China Challenge Robert G. Sutter6. Japan’s Shifting Strategy toward the Rise of ChinaMike M. Mochizuki 7. Future Imperfect: The EuropeanUnion’s Encounter with China (and the United States)William A. Callahan 8. Beyond Alliance? China’s StrategicPartnerships with Russia and India Yong Deng9. Southeast Asian Perspectives on the China ChallengeEvelyn Goh 10. Latin America and China’s GrowingInterest He Li Part 3: Managing the Challenge11. Unipolarity: Implications for China, the US and theWorld Qingguo Jia 12. Managing the Challenge: PowerShift in U.S.-China Relations Quansheng ZhaoSeptember 2008: 234 x 156: 280ppHb: 978-0-415-46573-1: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89013-4

NEW

Nuclear Weapons and ConflictTransformationThe Case of India-Pakistan

Saira Khan, University of British Columbia, Canada

This new volume exploreswhat the acquisition ofnuclear weapons means forthe life of a protractedconflict, using the case studyof the conflict between Indiaand Pakistan.

Selected Contents: IntroductionPart 1: Theory 1. Studies onConflict Transformation 2. Scholarship on Ramificationsof Nuclear Weapons Acquisition

3. Elucidating Conflict Transformation with NuclearWeapons Part 2: The India-Pakistan ProtractedConflict 4. Life of the Protracted Conflict 5. Introduction of Nuclear Weapons in the Conflict 6. Crises and Wars in the Pre-Nuclear Period 7. Crisesand Non-escalation in the Nuclear Period 8. Futile PeaceInitiatives in the Midst of Violence 9. ConflictTransformed 10. Potential for Conflict Termination.Conclusion. BibliographySeptember 2008: 234 x 156: 216ppHb: 978-0-415-37507-8: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89176-6

NEW

The Rise of China and International SecurityAmerica and Asia Respond

Edited by Kevin J. Cooney, Union University,Tennessee, USA and Yoichiro Sato, Asia-PacificCenter for Security Studies, Hawaii, USA

This comprehensive volumefills a gap in the existingliterature by focusing on theresponses of other East Asianstates to China’s rise,exploring its implications forthe region and beyond.

Selected Contents:1. Introduction Kevin Cooney2. The Rise of China: ChinesePerspectives Jian Yang3. Chinese-American Hegemonic

Competition in East Asia: A New Cold War or into theArms of America? Kevin Cooney 4. U.S. StrategicRelations with a Rising China: Trajectories and Impacts onAsia-Pacific Security Evelyn Goh 5. Tango without Trustand Respect? Japan’s Awkward Co-Prosperity with Chinain the Twenty-First Century Yoichiro Sato 6. Taiwan’sResponse to the Rise of China Denny Roy 7. Out ofAmerica, Into the Dragon’s Arms: South Korea, aNortheast Asian Balancer? Seongho Sheen 8. SoutheastAsian Responses to China’s Rise: Managing theElephants? Evelyn Goh 9. India’s Response to China’sRise Mohan Malik 10. Political Construction of HumanRights: With a Focus on North Korean Refugees in ChinaMikyoung Kim 11. Conclusion: China in the Eyes of Asiaand America Yoichiro SatoAugust 2008: 234 x 156: 280ppHb: 978-0-415-43396-9: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89363-0

5

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5

KEY SERIES

ASIAN SECURITY STUDIES

Page 6: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

NEW

Nuclear Proliferation in South AsiaCrisis Behaviour and the Bomb

Edited by Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University,Bloomington, USA and S. Paul Kapur, StanfordUniversity, USA

This edited volume explores competing perspectiveson the impact of nuclear weapons proliferation onthe South Asian security environment.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Sumit Ganguly andS. Paul Kapur 2. A Dangerous Exercise: Brasstacks asNon-Nuclear Near War Varun Sahni 3. Brasstacks:Prudently Pessimistic John H. Gill 4. Nuclear Optimismand the 1990 India-Pakistan Crisis Manjeet S. Pardesi5. Crisis and Opportunity: The 1990 Nuclear Crisis inSouth Asia Karthika Sasikumar 6. The Kargil War: AnOptimistic Assessment Devin T. Hagerty 7. The KargilWar and Nuclear Deterrence Neil Joeck 8. A War to Enda War: The Causes and Outcomes of the 2001–2 India-Pakistan Crisis Praveen Swami 9. To War or Not to War:The India-Pakistan Crisis of 2001–2 Kanti Bajpai10. North Korea’s Nuclearization and the Fallout from theSubcontinent Andrew Scobell and Michael R. Chambers11. The Implications of a Nuclear-Armed Iran in Light ofSouth Asia’s Nuclear Experience Devin T. HagertyAugust 2008: 234 x 156: 264ppHb: 978-0-415-44049-3: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89286-2

Conflict Management, Security andIntervention in East AsiaThird-party Mediation in Regional Conflict

Edited by Jacob Bercovitch, University ofCanterbury, New Zealand, and Kwei-Bo Huangand Chung-Chian Teng, both at National ChengchiUniversity, Taipei, Taiwan

This edited volume examines the sources,manifestations and management of conflict in EastAsia, which contains many of the world’s conflictflashpoints, such as the Korean Peninsula and theChina-Taiwan Strait.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Economics, Politics,and Security in East Asia Chung-Chian TengPart 1: General Approaches to ConflictManagement and Third Party Mediation in East Asia2. Third Parties and Conflict Management in the Contextof East Asia and the Pacific Jacob Bercovitch 3. ConflictManagement in East Asia: The China-Taiwan-North KoreaConundrum Chung-Chian Teng 4. Peacebuilding in EastAsia: The Role of Track II Diplomacy, Informal Networks,and Economic, Social and Cultural Regionalisation MikaelWeissmann Part 2: Approaches to ConflictManagement in East Asia: Third Parties and OtherParties 5. Third Parties in the Beijing-Tokyo Negotiation:Informal Political Actors and Mechanisms QuanshengZhao 6. Peace by Piece: The Six-Party Talks and BeyondJohn S. Park and Yeh-Chung Lu 7. The Limits ofHumanitarian Intervention in North Korea Sukhee Han 8. The Transformation of ASEAN as a Third-PartyMediator in Intraregional Disputes of Southeast AsiaKwei-Bo Huang 9. The ’Track 2’ Process within ASEAN &Its Application in Resolving the Aceh Conflict in IndonesiaEric Teo Chu Cheow Part 3: Third Parties in theContext of Taipei-Beijing 10. The Role of the UnitedStates in the Cross-Strait Dialogues: A TaiwanesePerspective Edward I-Hsin Chen 11. The Role of theUnited States in Cross-Strait Dialogues: A MainlandChinese Perspective Su Changhe 12. ManagingAmerica’s Taiwan Dilemma: U.S. Policy toward the TaiwanStrait and its Implications for Cross-Strait Stability Scott L.Kastner 13. Regional Organizations, Individuals, and theMediation in Beijing-Taipei Disputes after the Cold WarTsungting Chung Part 4: Conclusion14. Reflections on Conflict Management and Third PartyIntervention in East Asia Kwei-Bo HuangMay 2008: 234 x 156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-40353-5: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-92828-8

South Asia’s Cold WarNuclear Weapons and Conflict in ComparativePerspective

Rajesh M. Basrur, Nanyang TechnologicalUniversity, Singapore

This book is a groundbreaking analysis of the India-Pakistan nuclear confrontation as a form of ‘coldwar’ – that is, a hostile relationship between nuclearrivals. Drawing on nuclear rivalries between similarpairs, the work examines the rise, process andpotential end of the Cold War between India andPakistan.

Selected Contents: 1. Thinking about Cold Wars 2. Patterns in Cold War Rivalry 3. The India-Pakistan ColdWar – Ideational and Material Dimensions 4. The India-Pakistan Nuclear Relationship 5. Anticipating Cold War’sEnd 6. ConclusionApril 2008: 234 x 156: 184ppHb: 978-0-415-39194-8: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-92823-3

US Taiwan PolicyConstructing the Triangle

Øystein Tunsjø, Norwegian Institute for DefenceStudies, Oslo, Norway

This book is the first to trace the historical origins ofwhat is known as the ‘Taiwan issue’ in US-Chinarelations from a constructivist perspective.

Selected Contents: 1. Refocusing the Study of USTaiwan Policy 2. Discourses and the Origins of the‘Taiwan Issue’ 1949–50 3. Opening Space on the TaiwanQuestion 1969–72 4. Contemporary Challenges in USTaiwan Policy 5. Debating US Strategy towards China 6. Understanding US Taiwan Policy – The Linkagebetween History and Theory February 2008: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-45202-1: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93035-9

China’s War on TerrorismCounter-Insurgency, Politics and Internal Security

Martin I. Wayne, National Defense University,Washington DC, USA

This book examines the success of China’scounterinsurgency policies in fighting Islamicterrorism in its internal war in the Xinjiang province,and draws lessons for the West in its war againstglobal Jihadism.

Selected Contents: Introduction: Morality and Power inChina’s Wild West 1. Fighting Terrorism: China’s Bottom-Up Approach 2. Insurgency in Xinjiang 3. Counterinsurgency: China’s ’Infinite’ Political Will 4. The Changing Use of Force in Society 5. Grass-RootsInstitutions and Security 6. The War of Ideas: TheReshaping of Society in Xinjiang 7. Conclusion: GaugingEffectiveness. Epilogue: The Art of CounteringInsurgency 2007: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-45097-3: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93613-9

China, the United States, andSouth-East AsiaContending Perspectives on Politics, Security, andEconomics

Edited by Sheldon W. Simon, Arizona StateUniversity, USA and Evelyn Goh, University ofOxford, UK

This volume, with its wide range of perspectives,makes a valuable contribution to the ongoing policyand academic dialogue on a rising China. Itexamines a range of perspectives on the nature ofChina’s rise and its implications for Southeast Asianstates as well as US interests in the region.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Evelyn Goh andSheldon Simon Part 1: Economics 2. From ’Threat’ to’Opportunity’? ASEAN, China, and Triangulation EtelSolingen 3. China’s Rise and its Effect on ASEAN-ChinaTrade Relations Suthiphand Chirathivat 4. ASEAN andChina: Relative Competitiveness, Emerging Investment-Trade Patterns, and Prospects for Monetary and FinancialIntegration Tan Khee Giap 5. China’s Search for EnergySecurity and Implications for Southeast Asia MikkalHerberg Part 2: Politics 6. China’s Rise, Southeast Asia,and the United States - Is a China-Centered OrderMarginalizing the United States? Robert Sutter 7. Between China and America: ASEAN’s Great PowerDilemmas Alice Ba 8. Indonesia in Triangular Relationswith China and the United States Irman Lanti Part 3: Military 9. China as a Major Asian Power: TheImplications of its Military Modernization (A View fromthe United States) Paul Godwin 10. China’s Military Riseto Great Power Status and its Implications for the UnitedStates in Southeast Asia Michael Chambers 11. MilitaryModernization, Power Projection, and the Rise of thePLA: Strategic Implications for Southeast Asia Bernard Loo2007: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-42945-0: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-94606-0

Conflict and Cooperation in Multi-Ethnic StatesInstitutional Incentives, Myths and Counter-Balancing

Brian Shoup, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA

This book develops a model that explains how andwhy interethnic bargains between rival groups canerode given different institutional configurations.

Selected Contents: 1. Ethnic Identity, Economic Power,and Conflict 2. Ethnic Mythologies and FormalInstitutions 3. A Theory of Conflict and Cooperation inCounterbalanced States 4. Fiji: ’A Nationalist Iceberg’ inthe Pacific 5. Of Ballots and Tall-Grass: Malaysia’s Quasi-Democracy and Ethnic Relations 6. South Africa: ARainbow Nation in Zimbabwe’s Shadow 7. Conclusion2007: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-43391-4: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-94560-5

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6

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ASIAN SECURITY STUDIES

Page 7: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Asia-Pacific SecurityUS, Australia and Japan and the New SecurityTriangle

Edited by William Tow, Australian NationalUniversity, Canberra, Australia, Mark Thomson,Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), Barton,Australia, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, ResearchInstitute for Peace and Security (RIPS), Tokyo, Japanand Satu Limaye, Institute for Defense Analyses(IDA), Alexandria, USA

This book explores in-depth the increasingly criticaltrilateral security cooperation between the UnitedStates, Australia and Japan in the Asia-Pacificregion.

Selected Contents: Introduction Section 1: Evolutionof ‘The Triangle’ 1. Theoretical Overview 2. HistoricalOverview 3. Enriched Bilateralism? 4. InstitutionalAssessments Section 2: The Regional Dimension5. Triangularity and Sino-Japanese Relations 6. Triangularity and U.S.-Japanese Relations 7. Triangularity, Australia and the Region 8. Triangularityand U.S. Regional Strategy 9. Fragile States in SoutheastAsia and the South Pacific, and the Australian-JapaneseResponse 10. Triangularity and Regional Multilateralism11. Trilateralism, Economics and Security 12. The Powerof Three 13. Regional Maritime and Energy SecuritySection 3: Extra-Regional and Global Dimensions14. Trilateralism and International Terrorism 15. Australiaand Japan in Southern Iraq: A Case Study of NationalSecurity Decision-Making 16. The Triangle, BallisticMissile Defense and International Arms Control.Conclusion2007: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-41710-5: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93900-0

Chinese Military Strategy in theThird Indochina WarThe Last Maoist War

Edward C. O’Dowd, Marine Corps University,Quantico, USA

This well-researched volume examines the Sino-Vietnamese hostilities of the late 1970s and1980s, attempting to understand them as strategic,operational and tactical events.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. IntroductionBackground 2. The Chinese Political Work System Narrative 3. Hanoi and Beijing on the Road to War 4. The 1979 Campaign 5. The Battle of Lang Son 6. Artillery Diplomacy: Waiting for the ’Second Lesson’Explorations 7. Crisis in Command: The Cadre SystemUnder Stress in the Guangzhou Military Region 8. Political Work in the 1979 Campaign 9. Politics vs.Firepower: The Paradox of Maoist Tactics Conclusion 10. Conclusion: The Legacy of an‘Incredible, Shrinking War.’ Appendix 1: Principles of thePolitical Work System. Appendix 2: Principal Duties ofthe Political Commissar 2007: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-41427-2: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-08896-8

Chinese Strategic Culture andForeign Policy Decision-MakingConfucianism, Leadership and War

Huiyun Feng, Utah State University, USA

Selected Contents: 1. China as a Rising Power 2. China’s Strategic Culture and War 3. TheRevolutionaries: Mao and Zhou in the Korean War 4. China as a Regional Power: Mao, Zhou and Deng inIndia and Vietnam 5. Post-Cold War China Under NewLeaders: Jiang and Hu Wen 6. Taiwan and the Future ofSino-American Relations2007: 234 x 156: 200ppHb: 978-0-415-41815-7: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-08890-6

US-Indian Strategic Cooperationinto the 21st CenturyMore than Words

Edited by Sumit Ganguly and Brian Shoup, both at Indiana University, Bloomington, USA, andAndrew Scobell, US Army War College, Carlisle, USA

In this edited book, leading scholars and analystsdraw on new information to trace the origins,evolution and the current state of Indo-US strategiccooperation and explain why important differenceremain.

During the Cold War the two states frequentlyfound themselves at odds. With the end of the ColdWar and the demise of the Soviet Union, Indo-USsecurity cooperation started in a fitful fashion, butin recent years it has acquired considerable stability.The armed forces of the two states haveparticipated in exercises on land, sea and air andhave also carried out joint humanitarian missions.These notably include questions pertaining to thefuture of India’s nuclear and ballistic missileprograms, US-Pakistan ties and India’s links withIran.

This volume will be of great interest to students ofSouth Asian politics, Asian security, US foreign policyand security studies in general.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Are We Present atthe Creation?: Alliance Theory and the Indo-US StrategicConvergence? 3. Incompatible Objectives andShortsighted Policies: US Strategies toward India 4. AnOverview of Indo-US Strategic Cooperation: ARollercoaster of a Relationship 5. Indo-US Defense andLimitary Relations: From ‘Estrangement’ to ‘StrategicPartnership’ 6. U.S.-India Military-to-Military Interactionin the Context of the Larger Relationship 7. Prospects forUS-India Counterterrorism Cooperation: An AmericanView 8. Indo-U.S. Counter-Terrorism Cooperation: Past,Present and Future 9. Limited Cooperation BetweenLimited Allies: India’s Strategic Programs and India-USStrategic Trade 10. The Future of Indo-US Cooperation inMultilateral and Bilateral Peacekeeping Operations 11. U.S. Army’s New Peace Operations Era 2006: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-70215-7: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-70216-4: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-94674-9

The Chinese Army TodayTradition and Transformation for the 21stCentury

Dennis J. Blasko

’Probably the mostcomplete, best referencedand most accurate analysisavailable of the groundforces of the PLA. Itshould be part of thelibrary of any scholar oranalyst of the Chinesemilitary.’ – The China Journal

This book is a comprehensiveexamination of recentdevelopments in the world’s

largest army, the PLA.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. What is the PLA?3. Who is the PLA? 4. Where is the PLA? 5. How Willthe PLA Fight? 6. What Equipment Does the PLA Use?7. What Does the PLA Do? 8. What Does the PLA Do?(Support to National Economy/Other Missions) 9. Assessment 10. The Ghosts of Tiananmen2005: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-77002-6: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-77003-3: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-08740-4

India, Pakistan and the Secret JihadThe Covert War in Kashmir, 1947-2004

Praveen Swami, Chief of Bureau and DeputyEditor, Frontline Magazine, New Delhi, India

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The Informal War3. The Master Cell 4. Al-Fatah 5. Years of Retreat andRevival 6. The War of Many Fronts 7. The Nuclear Jihad8. Towards Peace 2006: 234 x 156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-40459-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96840-6

Political Islam and Violence inIndonesiaZachary Abuza, Simmons College, Boston, USA

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Democratizationand the Rise of Political Islam 3. Jemaah Islamiyah andIslamist Terrorism 4. Radical Muslim Groups and IslamistMilitias 5. Common Motives, Divergent Methods: TheFuture of Islamism in Indonesia 6. Conclusion: PolicyImplications2006: 234 x 156: 176ppHb: 978-0-415-39401-7: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96925-0

Religion and Conflict in South and Southeast AsiaDisrupting Violence

Edited by Linell E. Cady and Sheldon W. Simon,both at Arizona State University, USA

Selected Contents: Preface 1. Introduction: DisruptingViolence: Religion and Conflict in South and SoutheastAsia 2. From Bhindranwale to Bin Laden: A Search forUnderstanding Religious Violence 3. The Sword Againstthe Crescent: Religion and Violence in Muslim SoutheastAsia 4. Buddhism, Violence, and the State in Burma(Myanmar) and Sri Lanka 5. The Roots of ReligiousViolence in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh 6. ReligiousConflict and the Globalization of Knowledge inIndonesian History 7. Religious Violence Beyond Borders:Reframing South Asian Cases 8. The (Psychic) Roots ofReligious Violence in South and Southeast Asia 9. Debating Strategies for Disrupting Violence: Lessonsfrom South Asia 10. Violence and the Long Road toReconciliation in Southern Thailand 11. Lévinas and theQuestion of Civilizational Amity after September 11. Notes on Contributors. About The National Bureauof Asian Research. About The Center for the Study ofReligion and Conflict. Index2006: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-39734-6: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96748-5

China’s Rising Sea PowerThe PLA Navy’s Submarine Challenge

Peter Howarth, Department of Foreign Affairs andTrade, Australia

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. China’s TacticalSubmarine Fleet 2. The Geopolitical Context 3. China’sNew Maritime Strategy 4. Sea Control in the WesternPacific 5. Maritime Strategic Theory and the Logic ofChina’s Submarine Fleet 6. Geography, Narrow Seas andSubmarine Terrain 7. Disputing U.S. Command of theChina Seas 8. The Universal and the Particular inStrategic Logic 9. Influence of the Soviet Experience onthe PRC’s Maritime Strategy 10. Chinese StrategicCulture – Indigenous Elements 11. Chinese StrategicCulture, Submarines and Prospects for War in the TaiwanStrait 12. Conclusion 2006: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-36891-9: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-02915-2

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7

KEY SERIES

ASIAN SECURITY STUDIES

Page 8: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Continued...

Taiwan’s SecurityHistory and Prospects

Bernard Cole, National War College, USA

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. History 3. TheThreat 4. Defense Organization and Administration 5. Personnel 6. Taiwan Army 7. Taiwan Air Force 8. Taiwan Navy 9. Civil-Military Relations 10. A LookAhead2005: 234 x 156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-36581-9: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-01833-0

If China Attacks TaiwanMilitary Strategy, Politics and Economics

Edited by Steve Tsang, St. Antony’s College,Oxford, UK

Selected Contents: Preface and Acknowledgements 1. Drivers Behind the Use of Force Part 1: PolicyFramework 2. Political and Military Factors DeterminingChina’s Use of Force 3. The US Policy of Dual DeterrencePart 2: China’s Capacity to Use Force 4. Short-RangeBallistic Missile Capabilities 5. Unconventional WarfareOptions 6. Controlling the Airspace Over the TaiwanStrait 7. Command of the Sea 8. AmphibiousCapabilities 9. Industrial, Technological, Economic andInfrastructure Capacity Part 3: The Cost of a War toChina 10. Diplomatic Consequences 11. Economic andPolitical Costs 2005: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-38018-8: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-08741-1

Chinese Civil-Military RelationsThe Transformation of the People’s Liberation Army

Edited by Nan Li, Nanyang Technology University,Singapore

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. The Chinese Armyin Domestic Politics: Factors and Phases 2. China’sEvolving Civil-Military Relations: Creeping Guojiahua 3. Deferring to National Interest: Arms Control and Civil-Military Relations in China 4. Civil-Military Dynamics inChinese Defense Industry and Arms Policy: AnApproaching Tipping Point 5. Sorting Out the Mythsabout Political Commissars, You Ji 6. Servant of TwoMasters: the PLA, the People, and the Party, Dennis J.Blasko 7. Company Province: Civil-Military Relations inXinjiang, Yitzhak Shichor 8. China’s Expenditure forMilitia and People’s Armed Police 9. The PLA and itsChanging Economic Roles: Implications for Civil-MilitaryRelations 10. Dual-Use Technologies, Civil-militaryIntegration, and China’s Defense Industry.2005: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-37932-8: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-08742-8

China and International InstitutionsAlternate Paths to Global Power

Marc Lanteigne, McGill University, Canada

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Red Light, GreenLight: China and the World Trade Organisation 3. FlyingGeese and Rising Phoenix: China, APEC, and ExclusiveTrade Regimes 4. Chimeras or Peacebuilders? China’sNew Approach to Strategic Regimes 5. Labyrinth’s Edge:China and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation 6. Seeking Modernity: China’s Institutional Openings andShifts in International Power2005: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-36584-0: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-01837-8

Contemporary Security Studies

Series Editors: James Gow and Rachel Kerr,King’s College London, University of London,UK

NEW

Globalisation and Defence in theAsia-PacificArms Across Asia

Edited by Geoffrey Till, Victoria University ofWellington, New Zealand, and Emrys Chew andJoshua Ho, both at Nanyang TechnologicalUniversity, Singapore

This edited volume examines the impact ofglobalisation on the economies, security policies andmilitary-industrial complexes of the Asia-Pacificregion.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Joshua Ho Part 1: Theories of Globalization and Defence 2. Globalization and Armed Conflict Among Nations:Prospects Through the Lens of International RelationsTheory Brian Pollins 3. Beyond Interdependence:Globalization, State Transformation and National SecurityChristopher W Hughes Part 2: Globalization andDefence Policy in the Asia-Pacific 4. Globalization andMilitary-Industrial Transformation in South Asia: AnHistorical Perspective Emrys Chew 5. The Impact ofGlobalization on Threat Perceptions and Defence Posturesin Northeast Asia Guibourg Delamotte 6. The Impact ofGlobalization on Threat Perceptions and Defence Posturesin Southeast Asia: Two views Rizal Sukma and K S Nathan7. The Impact of Globalization on Threat Perceptions andDefence Postures in South Asia B Rahman Part 3: Globalization and the Defence Economy inthe Asia-Pacific 8. Defence and the Economy: AnIntroduction Ron Mathews 9. Globalization and DefenceIndustry in East Asia: Seeking Self-Sufficiency andTeaming Up for Dual-Use Technology Arthur S Ding 10. Exploring Southeast Asia’s Twenty-First CenturyDefence Economies: Opportunites and Challenges in theEra of Globalization, 1993-2005 Renato Cruz de Castro11. Globalization’s Impact on Defence Industry inSoutheast Asia Rommel Banlaoi 12. Globalization andthe Defence Economy of South Asia: Two Views VijaySakhuja and Deba R Mohanty 13. Conclusion GeoffreyTillOctober 2008: 234 x 156: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-44048-6: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89053-0

Disease and SecurityNatural Plagues and Biological Weapons in East Asia

Christian Enemark, University of New SouthWales, Canberra, Australia

Focusing on East Asia, this book sets out aframework for analyzing infectious disease threats insecurity terms.

Selected Contents: 1. Infectious Diseases as a SecurityChallenge Part 1: Natural Plagues 2. Severe AcuteRespiratory Syndrome 3. H5N1 Avian Influenza:Pandemic Pending? 4. Outbreak Response: Rallyingaround the State Part 2: Biological Weapons 5. TheScience and History of Deliberate Disease 6. BiologicalAttacks and the Non-State Perpetrator 7. Responses tothe Biological Weapons Problem Part 3: PathogenResearch 8. Beyond Biosafety: The SecurityConsciousness of Scientists 9. Biodefence: Lessons fromthe United States 10. Conclusion 2007: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-42234-5: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-08901-9

Vietnam in IraqTactics, Lessons, Legacies and Ghosts

Edited by David Ryan, University College Cork,Ireland and John Dumbrell, University of Leicester, UK

The essays in this book offer aseries of perspectives onconnections and parallelsbetween the Vietnam Warand the 2003 invasion of, andcurrent conflict in, Iraq.

Selected Contents: Introduction1. The Final Chapter? The IraqWar and the End of History 2. The Vietnam Laugh Track 3. Unraveling the DomesticForeign Policy Consensus:

Presidential Rhetoric, American Public Opinion, and theWars in Vietnam and Iraq 4. Iraq and Vietnam: MilitaryLessons and Legacies 5. ‘A National Symphony of Theft,Corruption and Bribery’: Anatomy of State Building fromIraq to Vietnam 6. ’Vietnam’, Victory Culture and Iraq:Struggling with Lessons, Constraints and Credibility fromSaigon to Falluja 7. Europe’s Vietnam Syndrome: Americaand the Quagmire of Iraq 8. No More Vietnams: Iraqand the Analogy Conundrum 9. Vietnam and Iraq:Strategy, Exit and Syndrome 10. Falling Dominoes: TheUnited States, Vietnam and the War in Iraq 11. The Iraqand Vietnam Wars: Some Parallels and Connections2006: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-40562-1: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-40563-8: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-96765-2

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8

KEY SERIES

CONTEMPORARY SECURITY STUDIES

Page 9: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Strategic Partnerships in AsiaBalancing Without Alliances

Vidya Nadkarni, University of San Diego, US

This book addresses thestrategies pursued bypotential challengers toAmerican global preeminencethrough a careful examinationof the nature and implicationsof the increasing interactionamong three secondarypowers China, Russia andIndia. It breaks new ground inlooking at the ways in whichthe triad of bilateral strategic

partnerships operate in the region of Eurasia/Asia.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Strategic Partnerships:Stealth Balancing in a Unipolar World? 1. Unipolarityand its Implications for the Balance of Power in Eurasia2. Strategic Partnerships in Asia and Eurasia Part 2: Bilateral Strategic Partnerships 3. Sino-Russian Partnership 4. Indo-Russian Partnership 5. Sino-Indian Partnership Part 3: Competitive VersusIntegrative Strategies 6. Geopolitics or Geoeconomics:A Hegemon in Eurasia? 7. Integrative Strategies Part 4: Nested Games, Contingent Outcomes8. ConclusionMarch 2009: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-77774-2: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-77775-9: £22.99

Security and Migration in AsiaThe Dynamics of Securitisation

Edited by Melissa G. Curley, University ofQueensland, Australia and Siu-lun Wong,University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Series: Politics in Asia

Security and Migration in Asiaprovides compelling insightsinto contemporary forms ofillegal migration underconditions of globalization,and makes a contribution tothe literature in internationalrelations and migrationstudies.

Selected Contents:1. Introduction: ApplyingSecuritisation Theory to

Unregulated Migration in Asia Melissa G. Curley andWong Siu-lun 2. Levels of Analysis Issues in theMigration-Security Nexus Melissa G. Curley 3. IllegalMigration and Migrant Smuggling in the Asia- Pacific:Balancing Regional Security and Human Rights AndreasSchloenhardt 4. Securitising Human Trafficking in theAsia-Pacific: Regional Organisations and ResponseStrategies Ralf Emmers, Beth Greener-Barcham andNicholas Thomas 5.The Securitisation of ChineseMigration to the Russian Far East: Rhetoric and RealityElizabeth Wishnick 6. Human Smuggling and Traffickingin the Taiwan Strait: Security Predicament or PoliticalDilemma? James K. Chin 7. The Cultural Economy ofIllegal Migration: Migrant Workers Who Overstay in HongKong Amy S.C. Sim 8. Human Trafficking in Post-SovietCentral Asia: A Critique of the Securitisation FrameworkNicole Jackson 9. Reflections on Managing Migration inSoutheast Asia: Mitigating the Unintended Consequencesof Securitisation Mely Caballero-Anthony 10. Conclusion:Undocumented Migration and the State/Human SecurityNexus in Asia Melissa G. Curley and Wong Siu-lunJuly 2008: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-40055-8: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93472-2

The Evolution of Regionalismin AsiaEconomic and Security Issues

Edited by Heribert Dieter, German Institute forInternational and Security Affairs (SWP), Berlin,Germany and University of Warwick, UK

By combing the analysis ofthe three dimensions ofintegration, this book enablesreaders to gain a broadunderstanding of the theoryand practice of integrationprocesses in Asia.

Selected Contents:Part 1: Concepts ofRegionalism, InterregionalRelations and the Role ofSpecific Players 1. The

Evolution of Regionalism in Asia: An Introduction2. ’Asia, whose Asia?’ Evolving Conceptions of an AsianCommunity from the 1930s till Today 3. China’s Rise inAsia 4. Japan and the Evolution of Asian Regionalism

Part 2: Regionalism in Trade, Finance and Production5. Bilateral Trade Agreements in the Asia-Pacific 6. Responses to Regionalism 7. The Future of MonetaryRegionalism in Asia Part 3: Regionalism and Security8. Trade and Security in East Asia 9. The (In)Effectivenessof Security Regionalism 10. Regional Peace throughEconomic Integration2007: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-44684-6: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93743-3

Korea in the New AsiaEast Asian Integration and the China Factor

Edited by Francoise Nicolas, Centre Asie Ifri,France

Series: Routledge Advances in Korean Studies

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Korea in the NewAsia Sophie Boisseau du Rocher and Françoise Nicolas2. Korean Perceptions of China’s Rise in East Asia Suk HeeHan Part 1: Korea, China and East Asian EconomicIntegration 3. Korea’s Regional Economic Strategy inResponse to the Rise of China Françoise Nicolas4. Financial Integration in East Asia: Which Role forKorea? Heungchong Kim and Yunjong Wang5. Integration? What Integration? - Monetary Co-Operation in East Asia, the Rise of China and Implicationsfor Korea Ulrich Volz Part 2: A New Regional Policyfor Korea 6. Korea’s Contribution to the EmergingRegional Architecture in East Asia: An AssessmentJaewoo Choo and Sophie Boisseau du Rocher 7. China’sAscendancy and the Future of the Korean PeninsulaTaeho Kim 8. China and the United States: The NewPower Configuration in East Asia and South Korea’sRegional Policy Changsu Kim 9. China and South Korea’sFuture Strategy Robert Dujarric2007: 234 x 156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-42006-8: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-94659-6

The Balance of Power in Asia-Pacific SecurityUS-China Policies on Regional Order

Liselotte Odgaard, University of Aarhus, Denmark

Series: Politics in Asia

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Powers, Balancesof Power, and Coexistence: The Views of the FirstGeneration of the English School 3. Sino-US Policies onthe Use of Force in the Asia-Pacific 4. Sino-US Policies onLegitimacy in the Asia-Pacific 5. Sino-US Policies onInstitutions in the Asia-Pacific 6. Sino-US Policies on Asia-Pacific Order in the Twenty First Century2007: 234 x 156: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-41591-0: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96496-5

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Chinese Security PolicyStructure, Power and Politics

Robert Ross, Boston College, MA, USA

Reflecting a coherent realist approach to the role ofpower and the pursuit of security in an anarchicinternational system, Prof. Ross’s scholarship onChina’s international behaviour covers suchfundamental areas as the role of internationalstructure in state behavior, the use of force ininternational politics (including deterrence, coercivediplomacy, and war), and the sources of great-power conflict and cooperation and balance ofpower politics, with a recent focus on internationalpower transitions. The research integrates therealist literature with key issues in Chinese foreignpolicy, thereby placing China’s behaviour in thelarger context of the international political system.

While emphasizing the role of the internationalsystem on Chinese behavior, the book alsoexamines the role of domestic politics in Chinesepolicy making. In doing so, it asks under whatcircumstances have domestic politics takenprecedence over China’s strategic interests, andconsiders the resulting impact of Chinese domesticpolitics on China’s security and its bilateralrelationships. The articles also focus on key aspectsof Chinese foreign policy, such as US-China relationsduring the Cold War and the post-Cold war era,China’s invasion of Vietnam in 1979, and theensuing conflict over Indochina, great-powerconflict on the Korean Peninsula, and the Taiwanissue. More recent issues covered include the rise ofChinese economic and military power for both US-China relations and the emerging regional securityorder, as reflected in the behavior of China’sneighbors throughout East Asia.

This book will be of great interest to all students ofChinese Security and Foreign Policy, Chinese andAsian Politics, US foreign policy and InternationalSecurity in general.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Structure, Power,and Politics in Chinese Security Policy Part 1: Rise ofChina, Great Power Politics, and East Asian Security2. Beijing as a Conservative Power 3. The Geography ofthe Peace: Great Power Stability in Twenty-First CenturyEast Asia 4. Balance of Power Politics and the Rise ofChina: Accommodation and Balancing in East Asia 5.The U.S.-China Peace: Great Power Politics, Spheres ofInfluence, and the Peace of East Asia 6. China Learns toCompromise: Change in U.S.-China Relations, 1982-84Part 2: Deterrence and Coercive Diplomacy inChinese Security Policy 7. China and the CambodianPeace Process: The Value of Coercive Diplomacy 8. The1995-96 Taiwan Strait Confrontation: Coercion,Credibility, and Use of Force 9. Navigating the TaiwanStrait: Deterrence, Escalation Dominance, and U.S. ChinaRelations 10. Comparative Deterrence: The Taiwan Straitand the Korean Peninsula Part 3: Domestic Politics andForeign Policy 11. From Lin Biao to Deng Xiaoping:Elite Instability and China’s U.S. Policy 12. The Diplomacyof Tiananmen: Two-Level Bargaining and Great PowerCooperation 13. International Bargaining and DomesticPolitics: Conflict in U.S.-China Relations Since 1972 Part 4: China and the Taiwan Issue 14. ExplainingTaiwan’s Revisionist Foreign Policy 15. Taiwan’s FadingIndependence MovementMay 2009: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-77785-8: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-77786-5: £21.99

9

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REGIONAL SECURITY: ASIA REGIONAL SECURITY: CHINA

Page 10: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

NEW

US-China RelationsChina Policy on Capitol Hill

Tao Xie, Beijing Foreign Studies University, China

Series: Routledge Contemporary China Series

This book explores relations between the U.S. andChina, focusing in particular on China policy in theU.S. Congress, which has been unusually active inthe development of this relationship, and the mostcontroversial issues in US-China relations: Taiwan,trade and human rights.September 2008: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-77688-2: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89014-1

NEW

A Rising China and Security in East AsiaIdentity Construction and Security Discourse

Rex Li, Liverpool John Moores University, UK

Series: Politics in Asia

This volume provides acomprehensive and in-depthanalysis of the securitydiscourse of Chinese policyelites on the major powers inEast Asia in relation to China’sself-perception as a risingpower. It is the first book-length study that utilizesInternational Relationstheories systematically toanalyze Chinese security

perceptions of the United States, Japan and Russia,and the debate among Chinese internationalrelations specialists on how China should respond tothe perceived challenge from the major powers toits rise to a global status.

Rex Li argues that the security discourse of Chinesepolicy analysts is closely linked to their conceptionof China’s identity and their desire and endeavourto construct a great power identity for China.Drawing on extensive and up-to-date Chinese-language sources, the study demonstrates thatChinese elites perceive the power, aspirations andsecurity strategies of other East Asian powersprimarily in terms of their implications for China’spursuit of great power status. This new work willcontribute significantly to the on-going academicand policy debate on the nature and repercussionsof China’s rise.

This book will be essential reading forundergraduate and postgraduate students andscholars of Asian security, China’s foreign relations,security studies and international relations.

Selected Contents: 1. A Rising China, IR Theories andChinese Security Discourse of East Asian Powers 2. Hegemonic Aspirations in a Unipolar World: USSecurity Strategy under the George Bush Snr and BillClinton Presidencies 3. September 11, Preemption andthe Bush Doctrine: US Security Strategy under the GeorgeW. Bush Administration 4. Security, Identity and StrategicChoice: Japan’s Quest for a Great Power Status 5. A KeyPlayer in an Emerging Multipolar World: Russia and EastAsian Security 6. China’s Response to the SecurityChallenge of the Major Powers in East Asia: IdentityConstruction and Great Power Aspirations 7. Conclusion:Chinese Security Discourse and Its Implications for theDebate on the Rise of ChinaNovember 2008: 234 x 156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-44940-3: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-44941-0: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88694-6

NEW

China’s Energy GeopoliticsThe Shanghai Cooperation Organization andCentral Asia

Thrassy N. Marketos, C.E.D.S., Paris, France

Series: Routledge Contemporary China Series

China’s need for energy has become a driving factorin contemporary world politics and a preconditionfor sustaining China’s continuing high economicgrowth. This book argues that a US presence inCentral Asia is necessary for securing the energyprovision of China from the region.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Chinese StrategicInterests in Eurasia 2. Shanghai CooperationOrganization: Security Role in Eurasia 3. Clashes andCoexistence among the Three Major Powers in Eurasia 4. Is a Strategic Meeting of Minds among Washington,Beijing and Moscow for the Sake of Eurasia’s StabilityRealistic? 5. The Nexus between Energy, Security andMaritime Power and S.C.O.’s Role in China’s EnergySecurity. ConclusionsNovember 2008: 234 x 156: 184ppHb: 978-0-415-45690-6: £80.00

China and the New International OrderEdited by Wang Gungwu, National University ofSingapore, Singapore and Zheng Yongnian,University of Nottingham, UK

Series: China Policy Series

This book explores China’s place in the newinternational order, from both the internationalperspective, and from the perspective within China.It discusses how far the new international order, asviewed by the United States and with the UnitedStates seeing itself as the single dominant power,applies to China.

Selected Contents: Introduction Wang Gungwu andZheng Yongnian Part 1: Key Issues in ConceptualisingChinese International Relations 1. China andInternational Order: Some Historical Perspectives WangGungwu 2. Nationalism: Dynamics of DomesticTransformation and International Relations in ChinaZheng Yongnian 3. Redefining Chinese Concept ofSovereignty Shan Wenhua 4. Sovereignty in Exercise:Constructing Political Chinese-ness in Post-1997 HongKong Tok Sow Keat 5. Beyond Symbiosis: ChangingCivil-Military Relationship after Mao You Ji Part 2: Chinaand Globalization 6. China Reshapes the WorldEconomy Deng Ziliang and Zheng Yongnian 7. Understanding Chinese Views of the Emerging GlobalOrder Zhang Yongjin 8. China Joins Global Governance:The Ten Conundrums Gerald Chan Part 3: China andRegionalism 9. Contested International Relations Theoryand China’s Constructing Regional Entitlement GordonCheung 10. Learning from the EU? China’s ChangingOutlook Towards Multilateralism Jean-Pierre Cabestan11. Northeast Asia Regionalism and China: From anOutside-in Perspective Jaewoo Choo 12. China in theShanghai Cooperation Organization Pan Guang13. China and ASEAN in the Asian Regional IntegrationSheng Lijun Part 4: China and International RelationsStudies 14. De-Constructing Cultural Realism AnthonyA. Loh 15. Toward a Chinese School of InternationalRelations? Ren Xiao January 2008: 234 x 156: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-44111-7: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93226-1

China’s Security Interests in the 21st CenturyRussell Ong, University of Manchester, UK

Series: Routledge Security in Asia Series

The collapse of communism in Europe, the quest foreconomic security and the War on Terror have allaffected China’s view of security matters. This bookprovides a comprehensive study of the new policyand security challenges China faces in the comingyears.

Selected Contents: 1. The Chinese Concept of Security2. The Threat of Peaceful Evolution 3. US GlobalSupremacy 4. The Taiwan Issue 5. The Challenge ofJapan 6. The Alliance with North Korea 7. The Role ofSouth Korea 8. The Importance of Central Asia 9. TheDrive to Global Power Status 2007: 234 x 156: 176ppHb: 978-0-415-39215-0: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96222-0

Human Security and the Chinese StateHistorical Transformations and the Modern Questfor Sovereignty

Robert Bedeski, University of Victoria, Canada

Series: Routledge Contemporary China Series

Surveying the historical transformations of theChinese state, this book focuses on human securityin contrast with the twenty-first century obsessionwith national security.

Selected Contents: 1. Human Survival, HumanInstitutions, and Human Security 2. Dimensions ofHuman Security: Foundations in Individual Human Life 3. The Modern Sovereign Nation-State 4. Prologue to aTheory of Human Security 5. A Notational Theory ofHuman Security 6. Actualizing Imperial Sovereignty inAncient China 7. Claiming Dynastic Sovereignty underthe Imperial Meta-Constitution 8. Sovereignty and State-Building in Late Qing and Republican China 9. Contemporary China’s Incomplete Sovereignty - Fusion,Succession, and Adoption 2007: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-41255-1: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96475-0

US-China Relations in the 21st CenturyPower Transition and Peace

Zhiqun Zhu, University of Bridgeport, USA

Series: Politics in Asia

Selected Contents:1. Introduction 2. RethinkingTheories of Power Transition 3. British-German Relations(1871-1914) 4. Anglo-AmericanRelations (1865-1945) 5. Sino-American Relations (1990-2005)6. Comparisons and Contrasts7. U.S.-China Relations andPower Transition in the Twenty-First Century2006: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-70208-9: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-08658-2

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10

REGIONAL SECURITY: CHINA

Page 11: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

China-US Relations TransformedPerspectives and Strategic Interactions

Edited by Suisheng Zhao, University of Denver, USA

Series: Routledge Contemporary China Series

This book, written by leading scholars and policyanalysts from both the US and China, explores thetransformation and multifaceted nature of US-Chinarelations.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction1. Implications of China’s Rise for US-China RelationsSuisheng Zhao 2. China Rising: Geo-Strategic Thrust andDiplomatic Engagement Suisheng Zhao Part 2: Perspectives of Chinese Scholars 3. Learningto Live with the Hegemon: China’s Policy toward the U.S.Since the End of the Cold War Jia Qingguo 4. Complexity and Transformational Structure of China-US Relations Chen Dongxiao 5. Comparing SecurityConcepts of China and the United States Xu Jian 6. Nuclear Deterrence and Sino-U.S. StrategicRelationship Zhang Baohui 7. China-US EconomicRelations and the Trade Imbalance Issue Li Wei Part 3: Perspectives of US-Based Scholars8. Managing a Multifaceted Relationship with ChinaPhillip Saunders 9. The Domestic Political Game Behindthe Engagement Strategy Jean Garrison 10. ChineseMilitary Modernization and Energy Security: Conflict orCooperation? Bernard Cole 11. The Rise of China andSino-American Energy Cooperation June Teufel Dreyer12. China’s Economic Rise: Implications for the UnitedStates Pieter Bottelier 13. China, the US and Japan:Reconfiguring Relations in Southeast Asia ElizabethEconomy2007: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-43867-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93478-4

China WatchingPerspectives from Europe, Japan and the United States

Edited by Robert Ash, School of Oriental andAfrican Studies, University of London, UK, David Shambaugh, George Washington University,USA and Seiichiro Takagi, Aoyama GakuinUniversity, Japan

’The book provides anilluminating map of ...three fields ofcontemporary Chinastudies, and will be ofgreat interest to specialistsseeking new ideas andinsights on how their workfits into the broader trendson contemporary Chinastudies.’ – Robert Sutter, TheChina Journal, No 58, July 2007

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Part 1: Studies ofChina’s Economy 2. Studies of China’s Economy inEurope 3. Studies of China’s Economy in Japan 4. Studies of China’s Economy in the United States Part 2: Studies of Chinese Politics 5. Studies ofChinese Politics in Europe 6. Studies of Chinese Politicsin Japan 7. Studies of Chinese Politics in the UnitedStates Part 3: Studies of China’s Foreign and SecurityPolicies 8. Studies of China’s Foreign and SecurityPolicies in Europe 9. Studies of China’s Foreign andSecurity Policies of China in Japan 10. Studies of China’sForeign and Security Policies in the United States Part 4: Epilogue 11. International China Watching inthe 21st Century2006: 234 x 156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-41396-1: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-41397-8: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-96775-1

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Japan’s Security Policy and BallisticMissile DefenceChristopher W. Hughes, University of Warwick, UK

Series: Sheffield Centre for JapaneseStudies/Routledge Series

Japan’s Security Policy and Ballistic Missile Defenceprovides an analysis of a very topical andcontroversial subject: Japan’s participation in theAmerican ’Star Wars’ missile programme. Based onextensive research and interviews with many ofJapan’s policy makers, this book is a must read foranyone interested in security issues in the AsiaPacific.August 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-29888-9: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-50443-7

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Japan’s Security IdentityFrom a Peace-State to an International-State

Bhubhindar Singh, University of Sheffield, UK

Series: Sheffield Centre for JapaneseStudies/Routledge Series

This book examines Japanese post-Cold War securitypolicy, analyzing how Japan reacted to the end ofthe Cold War, the results of the transformation inthe post-Cold War security environment, and exactlyhow Japanese security has changed from its ColdWar design.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Identity andJapanese Security Policy 2. Japanese Security Identity 3. Japan and UN Peacekeeping 4. US-Japan DefenceCooperation 5. Fight Against Terrorism 6. ConclusionJuly 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-46336-2: £75.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Northern Territories, Asia-PacificRegional Conflicts and the ÅlandExperienceUntying the Kurillian Knot

Edited by Kimie Hara, University of Calgary,Canada and Geoffrey Jukes, University ofMelbourne, Australia

Series: Routledge Studies in Asia’sTransformations

Examining the origin and development of the’Northern Territories’/Southern Kuriles sovereigntydispute, this volume is the first to take inspirationfrom the multilaterally resolved Åland conflict toinvestigate the possibility of a solution.

Selected Contents: Foreword. Preface. Introduction:Northern Territories, Asia-Pacific Regional Conflicts andthe Åland Experience: Untying the Kurillian Knot 1. TheAutonomy of Åland and Conflict Resolution 2. TheNorthern Territories Issue: Japanese-Russian Relations andDomestic Concerns in Japan 3. The Territorial Disputebetween Japan and Russia: The ’Two-island Solution’ andPutin’s last years as President 4. The Cold War in EastAsia and the Northern Territories Problem 5. Can theSouthern Kuriles be Demilitarized? 6. US Views on theNorthern Territories Issue 7. The Indigenous Ainu ofJapan at the Time of the Åland Settlement 8. Solvingthe Territorial Dispute between Japan and Russia : ÅlandIslands and Finland’s Post-World War II experiences asSource of Inspiration 9. Envisioning Åland-InspiredSolutions for the Northern Territories Problem March 2009: 234 x 156: 176ppHb: 978-0-415-48409-1: £65.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88016-6

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

The US-Japan AllianceBalancing Soft and Hard Power in East Asia

Edited by David Arase, Pomona College, USA andTsuneo Akaha, Montery University, USA

Series: Nissan Institute/Routledge JapaneseStudies

This book explores the way Japan uses soft power inits relationship with the US, its Asian neighboursand Europe and aims to contribute to a deeperunderstanding of the role of soft power ininternational relations.February 2009: 234 x 156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-48713-9: £75.00

NEW

Japan’s Middle East Security PolicyTheory and Cases

Yukiko Miyagi, University of Durham, UK

Series: Sheffield Centre for JapaneseStudies/Routledge Series

This book focuses onJapanese policy towardMiddle East security issues,examining how policy isshaped by the need to bothmaintain Japan’s securityalliance with the US and itsoil relationship with states inthe Middle East.

Selected Contents:1. Introduction: Aims, Debatesand Theoretical Framework

2. Japan’s Policy Towards Middle East Security Issues: AnOverview 3. Policy Determinants and the Policy-makingProcess 4. The Iraq War 5. The Iranian Nuclear Crisis 6. Syria Under US Hostility 7. Conclusion: Findings andImplicationsSeptember 2008: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-45878-8: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93115-8

Japanese-Russian Relations,1907–2007Joseph Ferguson, Vice President, National Council for Eurasian and East European Research(NCEEER), USA

Series: Routledge Contemporary Japan Series

This book presents a comprehensive survey ofJapanese-Russian relations from the end of theRusso-Japanese War until the present. Based onextensive original research in Japanese and Russiansources, it shows how the hopeful period of the late1990s – when acrimonious relations between thetwo briefly ceased – was not in fact unique.

Selected Contents: Introduction: Continuing Patterns 1. The Patterns Begin 2. Cold War Patterns 3. AnotherRapprochement 4. The International Context 5. TheDomestic Political Context 6. The Ideational Context.Conclusion: Japan and Russia in 1996–2007 April 2008: 234 x 156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-45314-1: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-92920-9

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11

REGIONAL SECURITY: CHINA REGIONAL SECURITY: JAPAN

Page 12: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Rethinking Japanese SecurityInternal and External Dimensions

Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University, USA

Series: Security and Governance

This collection brings togetherPeter J. Katzenstein’s selectedessays on the regional anddomestic dimensions ofJapan’s security policy. Using atheoretical and comparativeperspective, it covers recentdevelopments in Japanesesecurity.

Selected Contents: 1. JapaneseSecurity in Perspective Peter J.Katzenstein 2. Japan, Asian-

Pacific Security, and the Case for Analytical EclecticismPeter J. Katzenstein and Nobuo Okawara (2001) Part 1: Japan’s Internal and External Security Policies3. Japan’s Security Policy: Political, Economic and MilitaryDimensions Peter J. Katzenstein and Nobuo Okawara(1991) 4. Japan’s Internal Security Policy Peter J.Katzenstein and Yutaka Tsujinaka (1991) 5. Japan andAsian-Pacific Security: Regionalization, EntrenchedBilateralism and Incipient Multilateralism Nobuo Okawaraand Peter J. Katzenstein (2001) 6. Immovable Object?Japan’s Security Policy in East Asia H. Richard Friman,David Leheny, Peter J. Katzenstein and Nobuo Okawara(2006) Part 2: Japanese and Asian Security inComparative Perspective 7. Coping with Terrorism:Norms and Internal Security in Germany and Japan PeterJ. Katzenstein (1993) 8. Why Is There no NATO in Asia?Collective Identity, Regionalism, and the Origins ofMultilateralism Christopher Hemmer and Peter J.Katzenstein (2002) 9. Same War-Different Views:Germany, Japan, and Counter-Terrorism Peter J.Katzenstein (2003) Part 3: Analytical Eclecticism andSecurity 10. Rethinking Asian Security: A Case forAnalytical Eclecticism Peter J. Katzenstein and Rudra Sil(2004)March 2008: 234 x 156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-77394-2: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-77395-9: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92874-5

Japan’s Security Policy and theASEAN Regional ForumThe Search for Multilateral Security in the Asia-Pacific

Takeshi Yuzawa, The Japan Institute ofInternational Affairs, Japan

Series: Sheffield Centre for JapaneseStudies/Routledge Series

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Japan’s GrowingInterest in Asia-Pacific Security Multilateralism: The Roadto the Nakayama Proposal (1989-1991) 2. The Surge ofJapan’s Enthusiasm for Regional Security Multilateralismand the Formation of the ARF (1992-1993) 3. Japan’sPolicy on the Evolution of Confidence Building Measuresin the ARF 4. Japan’s Challenges for PromotingPreventive Diplomacy in the ARF 5. Japan andMultilateral Security Dialogue in the ARF (1994-1997):Security Dialogue as a Means of Reassuring, Engaging orConstraining China? 6. Japan and Multilateral SecurityDialogue in the ARF (1998-2005): Eroding Confidence inMultilateral Approaches to Regional Security Issues 7. Japan’s Changing Conceptions of the ARF: From anOptimistic Liberal to a Pessimistic Realist Perspective onAsia-Pacific Security Multilateralism. Conclusion2007: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-40337-5: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96497-2

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

War, Transformation and Asia-Pacific SecurityTechnology and Future Security

Malcolm R. Davis, Royal Australian Navy,Department of Defence, Australia

Series: Strategy and History

This book explores how the notion of a ‘Revolutionin Military Affairs’ or RMA might emerge in EastAsia, particularly within the maritime (naval and air)realm of military operations and capabilities.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The ChangingCharacter and Conduct of War 3. What isTransformation and does it matter? 4. Transformationand the Asia-Pacific Region 5. Future Warfare andTransformation in Asia 6. What does Future Warfare looklike? 7. Conclusions. BibliographyMay 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-36620-5: £70.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Colonialism, Violence and Muslimsin Southeast AsiaThe Maria Hertogh Controversy and ItsAftermath

Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied, NationalUniversity of Singapore

Series: Routledge Studies in the Modern History of Asia

This book deals with the genesis, outbreak and far-reaching effects of a legal controversy andoutbreak of mass violence which determined thecourse of British colonial rule after post World WarTwo in Singapore and Malaya. It will be of interestto scholars of British Colonial History andDecolonization and Asian History.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The ColonialSetting and Outbreak of Violence 3. Proscription 4. Surveillance 5. Self-Criticism 6. Reconciliation 7. Reform 8. ConclusionMay 2009: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-48594-4: £75.00

Ethnic Politics in BurmaStates of Conflict

Ashley South, Independent consultant, amongstothers for the United Nations and Human RightsWatch

Series: Routledge Contemporary Southeast Asia Series

This book considers the conflict and civil war thathas ravaged Burma, and considers the implicationsthat conflict has had for Burma’s development andprospects for democratization.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Conflicting Histories1. Shifting Identities [Pre-colonial and Colonial Burma] 2. State and Society, Grievance and Greed, Ethnicity andInsurgency [World War, Independence and Civil War]Part 2: Armed Conflict Since 1988 3. Enemies andAllies on the Thailand Border [Insurgency and Exile] 4. The Costs of Conflict [Humanitarian Impacts andResponses: Refugees and the Internally Displaced, andInternational Agendas] Part 3: State, Ceasefires andCivil Society 5. The SPDC and the Ceasefire Movement[Militarisation and Governance] 6. Civil Society and SocialChange [Contested Domains] 7. Re-ImaginingCommunities [Development and Democracy] June 2008: 234 x 156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-41008-3: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89519-1

Ethno-Religious Violence inIndonesiaFrom Soil to God

Chris Wilson, Formerly at Australian NationalUniversity, Australia

Series: Routledge Contemporary Southeast Asia Series

From 1999 until 2000, the conflict in North Maluku,Indonesia, saw the most intense communal violenceof Indonesia’s period of democratization. This bookexamines this brutal conflict, illustrating in detailhow and why previously peaceful religiouscommunities can descend into violent conflict.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. The Study of ViolentCommunal Conflict 2. North Maluku in Context 3. Initiation - Malifut 4. Escalation - Ternate and Tidore5. Dispersion - Torbelo and Galela 6. Political Exploitation- The Putih-Kuning 7. Killing in the Name of God 8. ConclusionMarch 2008: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-45380-6: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-92898-1

Communal Violence andDemocratization in IndonesiaSmall Town Wars

Gerry van Klinken, KITLV, the Netherlands

Series: Routledge Contemporary Southeast AsiaSeries

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Why Now?Temporal Contexts 3. Why Here? The Town beyond Java4. Identity Formation in West Kalimantan 5. Escalation inPoso 6. Mobilization in Ambon 7. Polarization in NorthMaluku 8. Actor Constitution in Central Kalimantan 9. Concluding Reflections2007: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-41713-6: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-96511-5

Security and SustainableDevelopment in MyanmarHelen James, Australian National University,Australia

Series: Routledge Contemporary SoutheastAsia Series

Selected Contents: Prologue.Acknowledgements 1. Introduction: Holistic andHuman Security - Concepts andContexts 2. The SecurityDiscourse in Myanmar - Regime,State and People 3. The SevenHorsemen of the Apocalypes -Strategies for Effective PovertyAlleviation in Myanmar 4. CivilSociety and the Political Ecologyof Sustainable Development -Empowernment, Opportunity

and Participation 5. Myanmar’s External Relations inRegional Context - China, Japan, India, Thailand, ASEANand BIMST-EC - Security Enhancement 6. Myanmar andthe West - Sanctions, Security and Engagement.Conclusion: Towards a More Civil Society2006: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-35559-9: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-00198-1

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12

REGIONAL SECURITY: JAPAN REGIONAL SECURITY: SOUTHEAST ASIA

Page 13: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

NEW

The Separatist Conflict in Sri LankaTerrorism, Ethnicity, Political Economy

Asoka Bandarage, Georgetown University, USA

Series: Routledge Contemporary South AsiaSeries

This book provides an in-depth, historical case studyof the origin, evolution and potential resolution ofthe civil conflict in Sri Lanka.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. ConceptualFrameworks: Broadening the Discourse 2. Prelude: TheBritish Colonial Period and Early Years of Independence3. From Class Struggle to Ethnic Separatism, 1971-19774. Liberalization, Authoritarianism, and CommunalViolence, 1977-1983 5. Internationalization of theSecessionist Struggle, 1983-1987 6. Indian Intervention,Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, and Intensification of Violence,1987-1994 7. A 'Peace Package', War, and theInternational Community, 1994-2002 8. NorwegianFacilitated Peace Initiative, 2002-2008 9. Globalizationand Conflict Resolution: Separatism or Pluralism?November 2008: 234 x 156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-77678-3: £80.00eBook: 978-0-415-88631-1

NEW

Conflict and Peacebuilding in Sri LankaCaught in the Peace Trap?

Edited by Jonathan Goodhand, SOAS, Universityof London, UK, Jonathan Spencer, University ofEdinburgh, UK and Benedikt Korf, University ofZurich - Irchel, Switzerland

This book brings together a unique range ofperspectives on the Sri Lankan peace process from2001-2006, and the attempts to bring thisprotracted violent conflict to a peaceful resolution. Itdraws conclusions from the Sri Lankan case forwider debates concerning post conflictpeacebuilding.

Selected Contents: Setting the Scene 1. IntroductionGoodhand, Korf and Spencer 2. Waiting for Godot? TheSri Lankan Peace Process from a Systemic PerspectiveRopers and Uyangoda Security Dynamics 3. RegionalSecurity Dynamics and the Role of India Keethaponcalan4. Domestic Security and the ’Shadow War’ C. SmithPolitical Dynamics 5. Nationalist Politics of the South D.Rampton and A.Welikala 6. Politics of the North-East L.Philipson and Y. Thangarajah 7. A Voice in the PeaceProcess? Political Spaces of Muslims N. Lewera and IsmailSocio-Economic Dynamics 8. The Economic Dimensionof the Peace Process Bastian 9. Aiding Peace? AnInsider’s View of Donor Support for the Peace ProcessMulakala and Burke 10. Muddling the Peace Process?Post-Tsunami Response and Conflict Dynamics Frerks andKlem 11. Civil Society and the Peace ProcessSarravanmuttu 12. Conclusions and Policy ImplicationsGoodhand, Korf and SpencerJanuary 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-46604-2: £85.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

The Maoist Insurgency in NepalDynamics and Growth in the Twenty-firstCentury

Edited by Mahendra Lawoti, Western MichiganUniversity, US and Anup Kumar Pahari, ForeignService Institute, US State Department

Studying the violent 21st century communistrebellion initiated in Nepal in 1996 by theCommunist Party of Nepal (Maoist) – CPN(M), thisbook contextualizes and explains why a violentMaoist insurgency grew in Nepal after the end of theCold War, in contrast to the decline of other radicalcommunist movements in most parts of the world.

Selected Contents: Introduction: Evolution and the Riseof the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal Mahendra Lawoti andAnup Pahari Part 1: Economic Aspects of theInsurgency 1. An Assessment of the Causes of Conflictin Nepal Bishwa Nath Tiwari 2. Changing Environment asthe Ultimate Cause of Social Vulnerability and ArmedRebellion: A Case Study of Maoist Insurgency in NepalJugal Bhurtel and Saleem Ali 3. Between ClientelisticDependency and Liberal Market Economy: Rural Supportfor Maoist Insurgency in Nepal Madhav JohsiPart 2: Organizational Aspects and MobilizationStrategies 4. The Maoists and Marginalized Groups:Overlap of Interests or a Case of Mobilization? MahendraLawoti 5. Recruiting Rebels: Indoctrination and PoliticalEducation in Nepal Kristine Eck 6. RecursiveOrganizational Theory: Maoist Student Organization’sNotions of Scientific, Systematic Organization and theirInternal Culture Amanda Snellinger 7. Catchy Melodies,Clenched Fists: Maoist Cultural Programs in the contextof Maoist Political Struggle Monica Mottin 8. The Clashof the Armies: Why the Well-trained and Equipped RoyalNepal Army could not Defeat the People’s LiberationArmy Ashok Kumar Mehta and Mahendra LawotiPart 3: International Dimension and ComparativePerspective 9. External causes of the Nepal’s ArmedConflict: Some Observations and Reflections Bishnu RajUpreti 10. The Maoist Insurgency: A ComparativePerspective Anup Pahari Part 4: Consequences 11. Anthropological Insights into a Model Village ofWestern Nepal: the Cultural Revolution during thePeople’s War Marie Lecomte-Tiouline 12. Consequencesof the Militarized Conflict and the Cost of Violence inNepal Dhruba Kumar Conclusion: Anup Pahari andMahendra LawotiFebruary 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-77717-9: £80.00

NEW

Routledge Handbook of SouthAsian PoliticsIndia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal

Edited by Paul Brass, Professor Emeritus of PoliticalScience and South Asian Studies, University ofWashington, USA

This unique reference work will be an invaluablesource of information to students and academicsinterested in South Asian studies, South Asianpolitics, comparative political science andinternational relations.

Selected Contents: Part 1: The Foundation of theThree Major States of South Asia: India, Pakistan, andSri Lanka. Part 2: Political Change, Political Parties,and the Issue of Unitary vs. Federal Forms ofGovernment. Part 3: The Judiciary. Part 4: Pluralismand National Integration: Language Issues. Part 5: Crises of National Unity: India 17. Crises ofNational Unity in India: Punjab, Kashmir and the NortheastGurharpal Singh 18. Communal and Caste Politics andConflicts in India Steven I. Wilkinson Pakistan 19. Ethnicand Islamic Militancy in Pakistan Mohammad WaseemSri Lanka 20. Ethnic Conflict and the Civil War in SriLanka Jayadeva Uyangoda Part 6: Political Economy:India. Part 7: Comparative Chapters. BibliographyDecember 2008: 246 x 189: 408ppHb: 978-0-415-43429-4: £95.00

India’s Energy SecurityEdited by Ligia Noronha and Anant Sudarshan,both at The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI),India

This book explores the multifaceted aspects ofIndia’s energy security concerns. It looks at thepolitical calculus of India’s energy choices,geopolitical, security and trade issues, India’s energyproblems in the wider Asian context andconsumption and climate related challenges.

Selected Contents: Foreword Rajendra K. PachauriPreface Ligia Noronha and Anant SudarshanPart 1: Understanding India’s Energy SecurityConcerns 1. Contextualizing India’s Energy SecurityAnant Sudarshan and Ligia Noronha 2. India’s EnergyChallenges and Choices Surya Sethi 3. Energy andPoverty in India Eshita Gupta and Anant Sudarshan Part 2: The Global Context: Trade and Geopolitics 4. Trading in World Energy Market Nitya Nanda5. Geopolitics of West Asian and Central Asian Oil & Gas:Implications for India’s Energy Security Talmiz Ahmad 6. Natural Gas Pipelines: Geopolitics, Affordability,Security Dimensions Ravi Kumar Batra 7. India-ChinaEnergy Cooperation Sudha Mahalingam 8. Security ofMaritime Energy Lifelines: Policy Imperatives for IndiaGurpreet S. Khurana 9. Energy Security and IndianForeign Policy C. Raja Mohan Part 3: EnergyConsumption and Technology Choices 10. Lifestylesand Energy Consumption Mitali Das Gupta11. Technology Options for India’s Energy Security: ASummary of a Modelling Exercise Pradeep K. Dadhich12. Incentivizing Change in Energy Choices Ajay Mathur,Koshy Cherail, and Deepti Mahajan Part 4: NuclearEnergy for India – The Debate 13. Nuclear PowerGrowth: An Option for Sustaining Indian EnergyRequirements Ravi B. Grover 14. The Many Phases ofNuclear Insecurity M.V. Ramana and J. Y. SuchitraLooking Ahead Ligia NoronhaDecember 2008: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-46838-1: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88436-2

NEW

Himalayan Frontiers of IndiaHistorical, Geo-Political and Strategic Perspectives

Edited by K. Warikoo, Jawaharlal Nehru University,India

This book provides a comprehensive analysis ofhistorical, geo-political and strategic perspectives onthe Himalayan frontiers of India. It explains thedevelopments in and across the Himalayas and theirimplications for India. Topics such as religiousextremism, international and cross border terrorism,insurgency, drugs and arms trafficking are discussed.

Selected Contents: Preface: Himalayan Frontiers of India- Some Perspectives K. Warikoo Part 1 1. India’sGateway to Central Asia: Trans-Himalayan Trade andCultural Movements Through Kashmir and Ladakh, 1846-1947 K. Warikoo 2. Great Game on Kashmir Frontiers K.Warikoo 3. Gilgit Dimension of Kashmir Frontier P. N.Jalali Part 2 4. India’s Himalayan Frontier: StrategicChallenges and Opportunities in the 21st Century VijayKapur 5. Strategic Dimensions of the Trans-HimalayanFrontiers Afsir Karim 6. Ceasefire Line and LoC in Jammuand Kashmir: Evolution of a Border Sat Paul Sahni 7. Northern Areas of Jammu and Kashmir B. Raman 8. Jammu and Kashmir: Contours and Challenges ofCross Border Terrorism M.M. Khajooria 9. The Rise of theIslamists and the Kashmir Frontier E.N. Rammohan 10. Tibet and the Security of Indian Himalayan Belt P.Stobdan 11. India-Nepal Open Border: Interlinkages,Issues and Problems B.C. Upreti 12. Indo-BhutanRelations: Strategic Perspectives Rajesh Kharat13. Security of Northeast Himalayan Frontiers: Challengesand Response Bibhuti Bhushan Nandy 14. Security ofHimalayan Frontiers: Role of Science and Technology,Modern Air Surveillance and Remote Sensing VinodPatneyNovember 2008: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-46839-8: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88732-5

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13

REGIONAL SECURITY: SOUTH ASIA

Page 14: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

Pakistan-Japan RelationsContinuity and Change in Economic Relationsand Security Interests

Ahmad Rashid Malik, Islamabad Policy ResearchInstitute, Pakistan

This book examines the complex nature of Pakistan-Japan relations, focusing on two key factors:economic interests and security concerns in the US-led global security system. Providing a thoroughanalysis of the history of relations between thecountries, it also sets out future prospects foreconomic and diplomatic relations.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Pre-IndependenceEncounters 2. Building a Relationship During the ColdWar: 1947-57 3. Changing Dynamics of Security andEconomic Ties: 1958-70 4. Convergence and Divergence:1971-77 5. Revival of Bilateral Enthusiasm: 1977-88 6. Look East: Changing Scenario in the Post Cold WarEra: 1988-97 7. The Nuclear Blast and Post 9/11Partnership: 1998-2007. Conclusion July 2008: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-46279-2: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89149-0

Islamist Militancy in BangladeshA Complex Web

Ali Riaz, Illinois State University, USA

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. The PoliticalLandscape of Bangladesh 2. Islamist Politics and theMilitants: A Taxonomy 3. The Missing State and theHomegrown Militants 4. A ’Friendly’ Neighborhood andthe Proxy-Wars 5. The Long Shadow of the DistantWorld 6. Future Trajectories of Islamist Militancy inBangladesh. Appendix 1: Constitutional Provisions of theCaretaker Government. Appendix 2: Bomb Attacks inBangladesh 1999-2005. Appendix 3: Militant IslamistOrganizations in Bangladesh. Appendix 4: Profiles ofIslamist Militant Leaders. Appendix 5: The JMB LeafletCalls for Islamic Rule. The Original Text of the JMBLeaflet 2007: 234 x 156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-45172-7: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93308-4

Madrasas in South AsiaTeaching Terror?

Edited by Jamal Malik, Erfurt University, Germany

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Jamal Malik 2. Ahl-iSunnat Madrasas: The Madrasa Manzar-i Islam, Bareilly,and Jamia Ashrafiyya, Mubarakpur Usha Sanyal 3.Making Muslims: Identity and Difference in IndianMadrasas Arshad Alam 4. Madrasas: The Potential forViolence in Pakistan? Tariq Rahman 5. PakistaniMadrasas and Rural Underdevelopment: An EmpiricalStudy of Ahmedpur East Saleem H. Ali 6. Pakistan’sRecent Experience in Reforming Islamic EducationChristopher Candland 7. The Gender of MadrasaTeaching Nita Kumar 8. Cinematic Representation ofIslamic Learning and Identity Conflict in Bangladesh ZakirHossain Raju 9. Power, Purity and the Vanguard:Educational Ideology of the Jama’at-i-Islami of India IrfanAhmad 10. In Lieu of a Conclusion Jamal Malik2007: 234 x 156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-44247-3: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93657-3

Military Control in PakistanThe Parallel State

Mazhar Aziz, Independent scholar

Series: Routledge Advances in South AsianStudies

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. ConceptualisingPolitical Developments in Pakistan 2. Explaining Politics:Of Institutions and Institutional Theory 3. The Military inPolitics 4. Examining Military Coup in Pakistan 5. Ordering the State: Consolidating Military Control 6. ‘L Etat, c’est Militaire’ 2007: 234 x 156: 160ppHb: 978-0-415-43743-1: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93357-2

Strategic Consequences of India’sEconomic PerformanceSanjaya Baru, Media Advisor, Office of the PrimeMinister of India

In this book, Sanjaya Baru, one of India’s mostrespected commentators on political and economicissues, pays close attention to the strategicconsequences of India’s increasingly impressiveeconomic performance. 2007: 234 x 156: 496ppHb: 978-0-415-43196-5: £29.99

The India-Pakistan NuclearRelationshipTheories of Deterrence and InternationalRelations

Edited by E. Sridharan, UPIASI, New Delhi, India

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: SubcontinentalPerspectives on Deterrence Theory, International RelationsTheory and South Asia E. Sridharan 2. InternationalRelations Theory and the India-Pakistan Conflict E.Sridharan 3. Deterrence and Nuclear Use: Doctrines inSouth Asia Rifaat Hussain 4. Conceptualising NuclearDeterrence: Pakistan’s Posture Rasul B. Rais 5. The ChinaFactor in South Asia’s Nuclear Deterrence Swaran Singh6. Theories of Deterrence and Nuclear Deterrence in theSubcontinent Arvind Kumar 7. Operation Vijay andOperation Parakram: The Victory of Theory? W.P.S. Sidhu8. South Asia: The Irrelevance of Classical NuclearDeterrence Theory Bharat Karnad 9. InternationalRelations Theory and Minimum Deterrence Rajesh M.Basrur 10. The Threat of Unintended Use of NuclearWeapons in South Asia Rajesh Rajagopalan 11. TheStability-Unstability Paradox in South Asia Varun Sahni 2007: 216 x 138: 308ppHb: 978-0-415-42408-0: £55.00

India - From Regional toWorld PowerAshok Kapur, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

Series: India in the Modern World

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: India as a Catalyst 2. Shifts in Indian Diplomatic History 3. Strategic Trianglesand the Indian Subcontinent 4. Indian Strategic Debatesand Dilemmas: Analytical Constructs 5. Nature of India’sForeign Policy: Utopia, Compromise Pease orEngagement? 6. The Build-up of the Suzerain States’System in the Subcontinent, 1947 – 1990s 7. TheTypology of Threats to India and The Nehruvian Record,1964-98 8. Nehru’s Innovations and Their Problems 9. Nehruvians and the Rise of Anti-India Trends in ForeignAffairs 10. The External Determinants of Change in IndianForeign Affairs, 1960s – 1990s 11. India’s Antagonists Re-Group, 1971-1980s 12. Liberating India and ItsNuclear Policy From the Nehruvian Shackles 13. India’sRise as a Major Power, 1990s 14. BJP’s Geopolitics andBuilding Strategic Triangularities. Epilogue2006: 234 x 156: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-32804-3: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-39084-9

FORTHCOMING IN 2010

Violence and Resistance inUzbekistanMatteo Fumagalli, Central European University,Hungary

This book examines the origins of the current wavesof social protest in Uzbekistan. The author analyseshow these have changed over the years andprovides an outlook into the country’s future.

Selected Contents: 1. Authoritarianism, Security and(in)Stability along the Silk Road 2. Uzbekistan’s PoliticalSystem 3. Opposition Politics in Uzbekistan from Birlikand Erk to Andijan 4. Continuity and Change in State-Group Relations 5. Whither Uzbekistan?June 2010: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-48093-2: £85.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Politics and Oil in KazakhstanWojciech Ostrowski, University of St Andrews, UK

This book deals with the oil industry in Kazakhstanwith which the political and economical future ofthe country is inseparably intertwined. In particular,it explores the Kazakh regime under NursultanNazarbayev and the methods used to control the oilindustry.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The Oil Industryand Techniques of Regime Maintenance 3. The KazakhOil Industry in Transition: De-formalising Formal Relations4. Strengthening the Informal Ties: The Kazakhization ofthe Oil Industry 5. Controlling the Oil-Rich Regions: LocalPopulation 6. Controlling the Oil-Rich Regions: LocalInterests Groups 7. Beyond the 1990s: Quasi-FormalRelationships and Consolidation 8. Summary andConclusionsApril 2009: 234 x 156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-48580-7: £75.00

FORTHCOMING IN 2009

Post-Conflict TajikistanThe Politics of Peacebuilding and the Emergenceof Legitimate Order

John Heathershaw, University of Exeter, UK

Provides a critical analysis of why peace has beenconsolidated in Tajikistan, and what roleinternational peacebuilding has had in this. It will beof interest to academics working on Peace Studies,International Relations and Central Asian Studies.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. War and Peace inPost-Soviet Central Asia 3. International Peacebuilding inTajikistan 4. Elite and Subordinate Discourses of Peace5. Democracy and Authority 6. Security and Sovereignty7. Development and Livelihoods. ConclusionsMarch 2009: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-48403-9: £80.00

NEW

Conflict Transformation in Central AsiaIrrigation Disputes in the Ferghana Valley

Christine Bichsel, Swiss National Centre forCompetence in Research (NCCR) and Swiss PeaceFoundation, Berne, Switzerland

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Seeing like aProject: Three Cases in the Ferghana Valley 3. Sources ofThought: The Ideational Background 4. The Way of theWater: Irrigation and Conflict 5. White Beards and ActiveCitizens: Institutions for Conflict Transformation 6. TheCrucible of Harmony: Violence and Politics 7. Trouble onthe Margins: States, Borders and People 8. ConclusionDecember 2008: 234 x 156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-46725-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88407-2

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14

REGIONAL SECURITY: SOUTH ASIA REGIONAL SECURITY: CENTRAL ASIA

Page 15: Asian Security Studies 2009 (UK)

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Human SecurityConcepts and Implications

Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh, Sciences Po Center forPeace and Human Security, France and Anuradha Chenoy, Jawaharlal Nehru University,India

Series: Routledge Advances in InternationalRelations and Global Politics

This book, now available inpaperback, traces the keyevolutions in the developmentof the concept of humansecurity, the various definitionsand critiques, how it relates toother concepts, and what itimplies for polities, politics, andpolicy.

Human security is an importantsubject for the whole world, inparticular Asia, as it deals with

interactions among fields of social change, such asdevelopment, conflict resolution, human rights, andhumanitarian assistance. In a globalizing world, inwhich threats become trans-national and states losepower, security can no longer be studied in a one-dimensional fashion.

Human Security contributes to this newmultidimensional conception of security, analyzes itsstrengths and weaknesses, and focuses on itsimplications for analysis and action.

Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Concepts 1. Rationale and Political Usage 2. Definitions, Critiquesand Counter-Critiques 3. A Paradigm Shift in SecurityStudies? 4. Human Security and Human Development:Shadow or Threshold? 5. Debating Dignity: HumanSecurity and Human Rights Part 2: Implications 6. Underdevelopment and Conflict: A Vicious Cycle? 7. The State and its Domestic Responsibilities 8. Intervention, Engagement and the Responsibilities ofthe International Community 9. Externalities of HumanSecurity: The Role of International Aid 10. Conclusions:Concluding Thoughts: Whither Human Security?October 2008: 234 x 156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-40727-4: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-47338-5: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-96595-5

War, Peace and Hegemony in aGlobalized WorldThe Changing Balance of Power in the Twenty-First Century

Edited by Chandra Chari, The Book Review andThe Book Review Literary Trust, New Delhi, India

Series: Routledge Advances in InternationalRelations and Global Politics

Written by leading scholars, such as Joseph Nye, Eric Hobsbawm and Akira Iriye, this book focuses onhow the US could adapt its foreign policy initiativesto fit in with the growing aspirations of a multipolarworld for a more balanced international order.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Chandra ChariSection 1: Global Perspectives 2. War, Peace andHegemony at the Beginning of the 21st Century EricHobsbawm 3. Global Governance in the Age ofTransnationalism Akira Iriye 4. The Future of PowerJoseph S. Nye, Jr. 5. The Troubled Quest for InternationalNuclear Order William Walker 6. Globalization,Hegemony and the Failure of Empire Prem Shankar Jha7. Global Prosperity and the Prospect of War in the 21stCentury T.C.A. Srinivasa-Raghavan 8. Human Security inAsia in a Conservative Era: Against the Odds, Twice PaulM. Evans 9. Hegemony and Strategic Choice Kanti Bajpaiand Varun Sahni Section 2: Regional Perspectives10. Europe, NATO and the Emergence of a PolycentricWorld Chandrashekhar Dasgupta 11. The InternationalRole of Latin America after September 11: Tying the GiantJorge Chabat 12. The Change of the World in the Early21st Century and China’s Strategy of Peaceful Rise YuXintian 13. Changing Balance of Power in theInternational Order in the Context of Globalization: TheCase of Japan Akiko Fukushima 14. Security in NortheastAsia: Alternative Scenario Vyjayanti Raghavan 15. EastAsia, ASEAN and Regional Order: Power, Cooperationand Principle Simon S.C. Tay 16. South Asian Economy:A Mix of Positives and Negatives N. Ravi 17. West Asia:Is There an Alternative to Sole Super-Power Hegemony?Hamid Ansari 18. Africa in 21st Century InternationalRelations: Challenges and Responses Abdul Lamin 2007: 234 x 156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-43577-2: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-94664-0

NEW

Human Trafficking and Human SecurityEdited by Anna Jonsson

Series: Routledge Transnational Crime and Corruption

This book examines human trafficking from post-Soviet countries, exploring the full extent of theproblem and discussing countermeasures, at boththe local and the global level, and considering theproblem in all its aspects.

Selected Contents: Preface. Foreword 1. Introduction:Human Trafficking and Human Security in the Baltic SeaRegion Anna Jonsson 2. Human Security and HumanTrafficking Louise Shelley 3. Organized Crime or CrimesOrganized: Isolating and Identifying Actors in the HumanTrafficking Chain Tamara Makarenko 4. The Interactionof Drug Smuggling, Human Trafficking and TerrorismSvante Cornell 5. International Countermeasures againstHuman Trafficking Inger Österdahl 6. Human Traffickingin the Baltic Sea Region: Supply, Demand, and OrganizedCrime Anna Jonsson 7. An Assessment of HumanTrafficking in the Kaliningrad Oblast: Strategies andResponses Galina Vitkovskaya and Elena Turukanova 8. Trade in Human Beings in Lithuania AurelijusGutauskas 9. Conclusions and Looking Ahead AnnaJonssonSeptember 2008: 234 x 156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-45181-9: £80.00

Radical Islam and International SecurityChallenges and Responses

Edited by Efraim Inbar and Hillel Frisch, both atBar-Ilan University, Israel

This book serves as a welcome addition to theintellectual and policy debate on the nature of theradical Islam phenomenon and how to respond toit. The collection analyzes the phenomenon ofradical Islam, the challenges it poses to internationalsecurity and the strategic responses available.

Selected Contents: Introduction

Part 1: The Challenge of Radical Islam: GeneralThemes Religious Extremism or Religionization ofPolitics? The Ideological Foundations of Political IslamBassam Tibi. Islam from Flexibility to Ferocity Ze’evMaghen. An Economic Perspective on Radical Islam AryeHillman Part 2: The Islamist Challenge: Case StudiesThe Rise of Jihadi Trends in Saudi Arabia: The Post Iraq-Kuwait War Phase Joseph Kostiner. Islamic Radicalismand Terrorism in the European Union: The MaghrebiFactor Michael Laskier. Explaining the Causes of RadicalIslam in Europe Jonathan Paris. The Evolution of IranianInterventionism: Support for Radical Islam in Turkey,1982-2003 Yasemin Akbaba and Patrick James. TheIslamic Dimension of Pakistan’s Foreign Policy RushdaSiddiqui Part 3: Responding to the Islamist ChallengeThe Potential Dangers of a ’Real’ Jihad Max Singer.Deterring Those Who Are Already Dead? LaurentMurawiec. Fighting Terrorism with Democracy? DanielByman. Counter-Terrorist Strategies Jonathan Stevenson2007: 234 x 156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-44460-6: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93840-9

15

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15

GENERAL SECURITY

TEXTBOOK

Security StudiesAn Introduction

Paul D. Williams, George Washington University, USA

Security Studies is the most comprehensive textbook available on security studies. Itgives students a detailed overview of the major theoretical approaches, key themesand most significant issues within security studies.

By collecting these related strands of the field together into a single coherenttextbook, Security Studies provides a valuable new teaching tool for undergraduatesand MA students.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Paul D. Williams Part 1: Theoretical Approaches2. Realism Colin Elman 3. Liberalism Cornelia Navari 4. Game Theory Frank C. Zagare5. Constructivism Matt McDonald 6. Peace Studies Peter Lawler 7. Critical Theory Pinar Bilgin8. Feminist Perspectives Sandra Whitworth 9. International Political Sociology Didier BigoPart 2: Key Concepts 10. Uncertainty Ken Booth and Nicholas J. Wheeler 11. War Paul D.

Williams 12. Terrorism Paul Rogers 13. Genocide and Mass Killing Adam Jones 14. Ethnic Conflict Stuart J. Kaufman15. Coercion Lawrence Freedman and Srinath Rhagavan 16. Human Security Fen Osler Hampson 17. Poverty CarolineThomas 18. Environmental Change Simon Dalby 19. Health Colin McInnes Part 3: Institutions 20. Alliances JohnDuffield 21. Regional Institutions Louise Fawcett 22. The United Nations Thomas G. Weiss and Danielle ZachKalbacher Part 4: Contemporary Challenges 23. International Arms Trade William D. Hartung 24. NuclearProliferation W. Pal Sidhu 25. Counterterrorism Paul R. Pillar 26. Counterinsurgency Joanna Spear 27. PeaceOperations Michael Pugh 28. The Responsibility to Protect Alex J. Bellamy 29. Private Security Deborah Avant 30. Transnational Organized Crime John T. Picarelli 31. Population Movements Sita Bali 32. Energy Security Michael T.Klare. Conclusion 33.What Future for Security Studies? Stuart CroftJune 2008: 246 x 174: 568ppHb: 978-0-415-42561-2: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42562-9: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92660-4• AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY

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RELATED INTEREST

ASIAN SECURITYEditors: Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University, Bloomington,USA, Devin T. Hagerty, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA and Michael R. Chambers, IndianaState University, USA

Asian Security aims to be theforemost journal on all aspects ofthe national and internationalsecurity in Asia. The journal covers"traditional" issues like interstatewarfare, the regional balance ofpower, alliances and othermultilateral security institutions,national defense policies, strategicculture, civil-military relations,nuclear proliferation, conventionalarms racing, arms control, andconflict-prone areas, as well as"new" security issues like thestability of democratic transitions,globalization and its backlash,ethnic conflict, insurgency andcounter insurgency, failing states, and transnational terrorism.

Volume 5, 2009, 3 issues per yearPrint ISSN: 1479-9855 Online ISSN: 1555-2764

www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/14799855.asp