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Abandoning hedging: reconsidering Southeast Asian alignment choices/ Hunter S. Marston

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2023Subject(s): In: Contemporary Southeast Asia Vol. 45, No. 1, April 2023, pp.55-81 (19)Summary: In the face of intensifying strategic competition between the United States and China, most Southeast Asian states continue to prefer hedging strategies in an effort to maintain autonomy and flexibility. This involves deepening ties with both superpowers rather than siding with one or the other. Many studies have focused on why and how states hedge, but no scholarly analysis to date has considered why a state would abandon hedging even when it is not facing a direct security threat.
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Journal Article Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals SECURITY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 69857.1001

In the face of intensifying strategic competition between the United States and China, most Southeast Asian states continue to prefer hedging strategies in an effort to maintain autonomy and flexibility. This involves deepening ties with both superpowers rather than siding with one or the other. Many studies have focused on why and how states hedge, but no scholarly analysis to date has considered why a state would abandon hedging even when it is not facing a direct security threat.

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