2009
DOI: 10.1080/09557570903104057
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The ASEAN Regional Forum: from dialogue to practical security cooperation?

Abstract: This article examines to what extent the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Forum (ARF) has moved beyond dialogue to practical security co-operation. Focusing on terrorism, maritime security and disaster relief as key areas of ARF activities in the past few years, the paper offers four arguments: first, while the ARF primarily remains a forum for regional security dialogues and confidence building, its participants have slowly become prepared to proceed with practical security co-operation… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Beyond the widespread criticism of the ARF as a 'talk shop' with no action (Katsumata 2006;Thayer 2009, 79), there has been a reported (Haacke), more recent, tendency of the ARF to move beyond dialogue towards practical security cooperation. This development suggests that common agreement might tend to bridge mere diplomatic declarations with more proactive policies (Haacke 2009). National considerations, however, trump conceptions of any common, stable ARF as well as ASEAN interest (Acharya 2014;Simon 1995).…”
Section: March and Olsen's Argumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Beyond the widespread criticism of the ARF as a 'talk shop' with no action (Katsumata 2006;Thayer 2009, 79), there has been a reported (Haacke), more recent, tendency of the ARF to move beyond dialogue towards practical security cooperation. This development suggests that common agreement might tend to bridge mere diplomatic declarations with more proactive policies (Haacke 2009). National considerations, however, trump conceptions of any common, stable ARF as well as ASEAN interest (Acharya 2014;Simon 1995).…”
Section: March and Olsen's Argumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Casarini (2011) outlined the security developments in East Asia and the consequences for the EU, but he made no mention of Myanmar. Interestingly, Haacke (2009) offered an interpretation of the way in which the Forum has moved beyond dialogue towards practical security cooperation. He contends that ARF is developing capacity building and operational security responses outside, as well as inside, the Forum, and argues that this outcome is the result of initiatives supported by a small group of ASEAN and some non-ASEAN states.…”
Section: The Literature On This Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Defence officials have been reliably supportive of substantive security cooperation (Haacke, 2009) and they have used NTS issues as leverage to successfully argue for greater regional coordination. In the opening remarks of the ARF DOD in 2012 the Director General of the Cambodian General Department on Policy and Foreign Affairs referenced the 'unpredictability driven by strategic competition with increasing non-traditional security challenges' and re-emphasised that '[n]on traditional security issues are no doubt the common key issues requiring joint efforts and cooperation' (Sowath, 2012) Table 1 provides a list of practical security measure on NTS issues that have taken place in the ASEAN Regional Forum and the ADMM processes.…”
Section: Non-traditional Security and The Asean Regional Forummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over time the ARF has grown to encompass the majority of the states in the Indo-Pacific. NTS issues have always been an important part of the ARF and have increasingly come under the Forum's jurisdiction (Haacke, 2009). In the last decade, the ARF agenda has ballooned with activities devoted to NTS cooperation; between August 2013 and December 2014 approximately half of the meetings/workshops on the ARF agenda were devoted to NTS-type problems (e.g., transnational crime, environmental degradation, cyber security, disaster relief) (ARF, 2014).…”
Section: Non-traditional Security and The Asean Regional Forummentioning
confidence: 99%
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