Charting a Path Forward in ASEAN’s Climate Change Agenda Article As the world grapples with the pressing and existential threat of climate change, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) needs to take more immediate action. While the agriculture sector has discussed the outcomes of COP27 in Bangkok held in December 2022, ASEAN as a body has remained conspicuously silent on its views on the outcomes of the COP27 (e.g., the Loss and Damage financial facility), its implications for Southeast Asia, and what the region should prioritize for COP28. By Albert Salamanca
Indonesia as ASEAN Chair 2023: The Dilemmas Article Indonesia picks up the theme “ASEAN Matters: Epicentrum of Growth”. President Joko Widodo stated that: “ASEAN needs to be stable and peace, an epicentrum for global stability. ASEAN also needs to be consistent in enforcing international law and avoid being proxy to anyone. ASEAN needs to be a region of dignity that upholds high humanity and democracy”. By Dinna Prapto Raharja
Southeast Asia in 2023: Economic Resurgence with Climate Change Uncertainty Analysis Southeast Asia’s transformation and navigation through the last few COVID-19-affected years now presents new challenges and opportunities. The region has grown digitally substantially, though political stability is always questionable. Climate change, energy and environmental sustainability present significant issues to address in 2023 and beyond. By Serina Rahman
What to Expect from ASEAN: 2022 Onwards Opinion The year 2022 brings in not just one or two but a handful of hot button issues to deal with for ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Between economic recovery from the pandemic through to internal civil war within Myanmar and external disputes and alliances, Cambodia assumes Chair of ASEAN with plenty to consider. ASEAN’s culture and intergovernmental model value cooperation but a different kind of multilateralism may be changing the stakes and strategies in negotiation across the ten member states. By Dinna Prapto Raharja
ASEAN's COVID-19 Response: Policies and Perceptions Article Southeast Asia is struggling to contain the spread of COVID-19 amid a resurgence driven by the Delta variant, leaving national governments with no capacity to spare on neighbouring countries. At the same time, ASEAN faces a trust problem due to the intangible nature of regional cooperation, and capacity issues associated with the prolonged deadlock over the selection of a special envoy to deal with the political crisis in Myanmar. Nevertheless, the potential for future regional cooperation after the health crisis subsides is within view. By Moe Thuzar
Tourism Struggles to See Its Future in Southeast Asia Article The hard-hit tourism industry in Southeast Asia looks for ways out of the pandemic. From promoting domestic tourism to ‘travel bubbles’ to Thailand’s Phuket Sandbox scheme to bring back international travelers, all ASEAN countries are facing novel challenges of the ‘novel’ coronavirus. What are countries doing to counter the disastrous effects on tourism? And what can countries learn from each other? By Vincent Vichit-Vadakan
How Multilateralism Does and Doesn’t Work in ASEAN Study Populism, nationalism, and an intensifying rivalry between the United States and China are testing the cooperation within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). As its 10 member States battle the effects of Covid-19 amid political and territorial crises, the group has struggled to overcome internal differences and address profound external challenges. By Deasy Simandjuntak
Biden and ASEAN: What Can We Expect? After US-ASEAN relations suffered under Donald Trump's administration, Joe Biden now promises that US foreign policy will once again focus more on allies. What can ASEAN expect from Biden's presidency? By Khoo Ying Hooi
RCEP: A Trade Pact amidst a Fracturing Factory Asia Opinion For the working people of ASEAN, East Asia and the Asia-Pacific, the RCEP’s arrival is puzzling. It has not received a warm welcome from the people at the grassroots. This is so because past and existing FTAs have not delivered the promised gains from a free-trade arrangement: full employment, social protection and well-being for the working people. By Rene E. Ofreneo
COVID-19 and the Climate Crisis in Southeast Asia Article At their core, the shared crises of the pandemic, the climate emergency and the plastics habit reflect how human beings view their space in the natural world. By Johanna Son