ADABIYOTLAR RO’YXATI
1.
William A Tow, Tangled Webs: Security Architectures in Asia, Australian
Strategic Policy Institute, Canberra, July 2008 and Alan Gyngell, Design faults:
the Asia Pacific’s regional architecture, Lowy Institute for International Policy,
18 July 2007
2. APEC’s members are: Australia; Brunei Darussalam; Canada; Chile; China;
Hong Kong, China; Indonesia; Japan; Korea; Malaysia; Mexico; New Zealand;
Papua New Guinea; Peru; The Philippines; Russia; Singapore; Chinese Taipei;
Thailand; USA and Viet Nam.
3.
Action for action and the formalization of regional security cooperation in
Northeast Asia , International Journal for Korean Unification Studies, vol. 16,
no. 1, 2007, pp. 1, 24.
4.
M. C. Abad Jr, Re-engineering ASEAN , Contemporary Southeast Asia, vol. 18,
no. 3, December 1996, pp. 237, 253.
5.
Declaration of ASEAN Concord II (Bali Concord II) Bali, 7 October 2003,
6.
The proposal has since 2007 been referred to in ASEAN official statements as
the ASEAN Political-Security Community, although the original term ASEAN
Security Community is still used in some ASEAN documents.
7. International Institute of Strategic Studies, Strategic Survey 2003/04, Oxford
University Press, London, 2004, pp. 262, 265.
8. Michael Vatikiotis, Southeast Asia in 2005: Strength in the face of
adversity, Southeast Asian Affairs 2006, p. 5.
9.
Lianita Prawindarti, The First ASEAN Defence Ministers Meeting: An early test
for the ASEAN security community? IDSS Commentaries, 16 May 2006.
10. ASEAN defence ministers sign Joint Declaration to deepen cooperation,
Channel News Asia, 14 November 2007.
11. Department of Defence Submission to the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign
Affairs, Defence and Trade, Inquiry into Australia’s Relations with ASEAN,
Canberra, August, 2008.
12.
Tim Huxley, Southeast Asia in 2007: Domestic Concerns, Delicate Bilateral
Relations, and Patchy Regionalism, Southeast Asian Affairs 2008, Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore, 2008, pp. 3, 27.
13. Tin Maung Maung Than, Cambodia: Strongman, Terrible Man, Invisible Man,
and Politics of Power Sharing, in Southeast Asian Affairs 2004, Singapore,
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2004, pp. 82, 84.
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