Australia's treaty activity in the Asia-Pacific: a sub-regional trends analysis
This paper investigates Australian treaty making with neighboring countries in the Asia-Pacific. Patterns of Australian treaty making with South East Asian countries are markedly different to those with South West Pacific countries and the difference is continuing to deepen. Treaties with the former...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International relations of the Asia-Pacific 2008-01, Vol.8 (1), p.103-124 |
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description | This paper investigates Australian treaty making with neighboring countries in the Asia-Pacific. Patterns of Australian treaty making with South East Asian countries are markedly different to those with South West Pacific countries and the difference is continuing to deepen. Treaties with the former are primarily bilateral and commercially oriented, whereas those with the latter are plurilateral and oriented to natural resources management and development. There is a major gap in Australian subregional treaty activity for natural resources management in South East Asian countries. A coalescence of issues in the law enforcement and security categories is occurring and the new direction in Australian regional treaty making for both subregions is to strengthen capacity to enforce the rule of law in national legal systems. Commercial treaty making remains and is likely to continue to be the strongest area of treaty activity. |
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Patterns of Australian treaty making with South East Asian countries are markedly different to those with South West Pacific countries and the difference is continuing to deepen. Treaties with the former are primarily bilateral and commercially oriented, whereas those with the latter are plurilateral and oriented to natural resources management and development. There is a major gap in Australian subregional treaty activity for natural resources management in South East Asian countries. A coalescence of issues in the law enforcement and security categories is occurring and the new direction in Australian regional treaty making for both subregions is to strengthen capacity to enforce the rule of law in national legal systems. 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source | Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Political Science Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Asia Pacific Region Australia Bilateralism Commercial treaties Commercialization Countries Double taxation East Asia Foreign policy Free trade Income taxes International agreements International cooperation Law Enforcement Legal System Natural Resources Peace treaties Policy making Regional politics Resource Management Rule of Law Security State income tax Treaties |
title | Australia's treaty activity in the Asia-Pacific: a sub-regional trends analysis |
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