Examining the engagement between civil society in Southeast Asia and ASEAN in the ASEAN Community building process
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Essay from the year 2008 in the subject South Asian Studies, South-Eastern Asian Studies, grade: A-, LUISS University of Rome (LUISS University of Rome, Faculty of Social Science), 47 entries in the bibliography, language: English, abstract: The essay examines the engagement between civil society in Southeast Asia and
ASEAN in the ASEAN community building process. It argues that in spite of initial efforts in
mutual accommodation, both sides have been divided from within, which slows the
engagement and gives it more form than substance. The efforts by ASEAN so far will only
create a community of the governing elite, not a community of the people. Regional
community building, just like nation-building, is very much a people-centered process. It is
not a simple top-down chain of command and control. If ASEAN wants to establish a real
community, it must change its modus operandi. It must be much more than an exclusive club
for the governing elite by giving more space as well as power to civil society in its agendasetting
and decision-making. A community is much more a cognitive than material construction, it is something
that has to be believed in, sensed, and nurtured by the people. In Southeast Asia, the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is building an ASEAN Community, which
is its most far-reaching project. Yet is it possible for a regional organisation that has been
widely criticised by civil society for being remote to and detached from the people to
establish a community of caring and sharing societies by 2015 as its statements indicate? And
if yes, how?
Meanwhile, civil society has an important role to play in community building. Yet
civil society in Southeast Asia is weak and fragmented. It has been excluded from ASEAN's
decision-making process. Can civil society contribute to ASEAN community building? And
if yes, how?
This essay tries to answer these questions by looking at the engagement between civil
society in Southeast Asia and ASEAN in the ASEAN Community building process. It begins
with a summary of the ASEAN Community building process, which is followed by an
examination of the role of civil society in community building. The third section introduces
civil society in Southeast Asia. And the fourth is about the engagement between civil society
and ASEAN prior to ASEAN community building. I divide this part into two periods: before
and after the Asian financial crisis.
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