Southeast Asia is a region rooted in cultural, ethnic, geographic and developmental
diversity but generally viewed as a united bloc. Under the steady expansion of globalization
and the drastic competition from neighbouring regions, regionalization in
Southeast Asia is confronting new challenges and entering a new era. To deal with
this, national leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
Member States decided in 2008 to adopt a new agreement, the ASEAN Charter,
to aim for deeper integration in the future. What are the differences in ASEAN’s position
in the international community after adopting the ASEAN Charter? This article
plans to analyse ASEAN’s developmental challenges and the legal contents of the
ASEAN Charter, as well as to compare some of the European Union’s experiences
in order to assess ASEAN’s new status under international law.
Southeast Asia is a region rooted in cultural, ethnic, geographic and developmentaldiversity but generally viewed as a united bloc. Under the steady expansion of globalizationand the drastic competition from neighbouring regions, regionalization inSoutheast Asia is confronting new challenges and entering a new era. To deal withthis, national leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)Member States decided in 2008 to adopt a new agreement, the ASEAN Charter,to aim for deeper integration in the future. What are the differences in ASEAN’s positionin the international community after adopting the ASEAN Charter? This articleplans to analyse ASEAN’s developmental challenges and the legal contents of theASEAN Charter, as well as to compare some of the European Union’s experiencesin order to assess ASEAN’s new status under international law.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..