
More than just a regime type: how Southeast Asian countries respond to COVID-19
Author(s) -
Muhammad Maulana Iberahim
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
proceeding international relations on indonesian foreign policy conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2807-1255
DOI - 10.33005/irofonic.v1i1.19
Subject(s) - authoritarianism , typology , normative , political economy , political science , democracy , politics , development economics , isolation (microbiology) , sociology , positive economics , economics , law , microbiology and biotechnology , anthropology , biology
As early as the pandemic has spread to Southeast Asian countries and elsewhere, observers have been tempted to associate regime type with COVID-19 responses. This trend encompasses the debate between democratic vs. authoritarian regimes that has been particularly helpful in identifying the normative basis to global pandemic responses. However, it leads into an inquiry whether the comparison of regime as part of variable isolation is scientifically viable in assessing the public policy, given the fact that the comparative matrix is vague. The comparison between democracy and the authoritarian regime will not bring a fair debate, but only to insinuate epistemological obstacle due to socially constructed dichotomy between the two even if the authoritarian regime has done any good practice. Furthermore, such a dichotomy only reflects a binary oversimplification of reality, which neglects an alternative explanation. Drawing on the framework of typology of COVID-19 responses by Greer et. al. (2020)–which includes four key foci, i.e., social policies and crisis management, regime type, formal political institutions, state capacity–this article will extend the framework by applying to the case of Southeast Asian countries, where these countries share similar structure and challenges, yet some countries arguably have been more successful.