By Alexander C. Chandra.
Lanham
The book Indonesia and ASEAN Free
Trade Agreement by Alexander C. Chandra. Laham very interesting for me, because
it provides information does not address the
current global crisis. However, it examines the debate between globalization,
regionalization, and ethnonationalism, particularly related to the development
in Indonesia after the regional Asian financial crisis in 1997-1998.
This book explain
regionalism as a mechanism to achieve a new world order, to combat the
excess of globalization and minimize the control and abuse by the state, to
obtain a better world order, and to improve the regional structure of
governance. He also showed the possible
symbiotic relationship between nationalism and regionalism, though there were
cases where one benefited more than the others and where no group benefited
from the symbiosis. Indeed, this
symbiotic relationship was the hypothesis that the author examines in this book
that the two could be mutually reinforcing. Regionalism should not been seen as a
replacement of nationalism, but it was a means to protect the citizens of
interdependent international communities.
To examine his hypothesis, he carried out a case study on Indonesian
nationalism and ASEAN regional integration, with a special focus on the ASEAN
Free Trade Agreement (AFTA). Indonesia
was chosen because Chandra saw that Indonesia's development had been shaped
with nationalism. ASEAN was selected
because of its commitment towards regionalism.
The writer suggested that the world had become both
integrated and fragmented at the same time. Global capitalism reminded the
leaders of a more internationalized world economy, continuing to widen the
search for more profitable ways of production and distribution of goods and
services. On the other hand, nationalist
economic policies in both developing and developed economies were also active
in countering globalization, with the purpose of protecting their own citizens.
I argued that regionalism had emerged in response to both the
rising trend of globalization and nationalism. Traditionally, nationalism was
seen as threatening regionalization and globalization. Nevertheless, today nationalism was very
different from that in the past. Today,
nationalism was not necessarily a threat to regionalization and globalization.
It could be an important step towards strengthening regionalization and
globalization. Therefore, Regionalism
should not been seen as a replacement of nationalism, but it was a means to
protect the citizens of interdependent international communities.
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