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Hedging and grand strategy in Southeast Asian foreign policy
Author(s) -
David Martin Jones,
Nicole Jenne
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international relations of the asia-pacific
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.542
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 1470-4838
pISSN - 1470-482X
DOI - 10.1093/irap/lcab003
Subject(s) - status quo , china , foreign policy , dilemma , southeast asia , grand strategy , politics , political science , security dilemma , political economy , international relations , east asia , economy , development economics , sociology , economics , epistemology , law , ethnology , philosophy
This article examines recent interest in hedging as a feature of international politics in the Asia Pacific. Focusing on the small states of Southeast Asia, we argue that dominant understandings of hedging are misguided for two reasons. Despite significant advances in the literature, hedging has remained a vague concept rendering it a residual category of foreign policy behavior. Moreover, current accounts of hedging tend to overstate the strategic intentions of ostensible hedgers. This article proposes that a better understanding of Southeast Asia’s foreign policy behavior needs to dissociate hedging from neorealist concepts of international politics. Instead, we locate the concept in the context of classical realism and the diplomatic practice of second-tier states. Exploring Southeast Asia’s engagement with more powerful actors from this perspective reveals the strategic limitations of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the dilemma that Southeast Asian states face from a rising China challenging the status quo in the western Pacific.

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