Middle Power Statecraft: Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Asia Pacific

Front Cover
Ashgate, 2005 - Political Science - 270 pages
Jonathan Ping's volume establishes a unifying theory for the concept of middle power (MP). MPs are states that have an innate form of statecraft and perceived power as a result of their size. The book presents hybridization theory as a basis for analysis, policy development and prediction of MP statecraft and perceived power. A prerequisite to the founding of hybridization theory is the new statistical method of definition that identifies sixteen MPs of Asia and the Pacific. The volume takes a comparative focus on Indonesia and Malaysia to inform and test hybridization theory, as well as to provide a historical analysis of Southeast Asia from a statecraft and perceived power perspective. It offers researchers and scholars of international relations and international political economy a theory that can be applied to the practical study of all middle sized states, ...

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