000 01045cam a2200157 4500
100 1 _aKOGA Kei
245 _aInstitutional collapse and shifting balance of ontological security: role of Malaysia's dual identity in the decay of ASPAC in the 1960s and 1970s/
_cKei Koga
260 _c2020
520 _aThis article examines the causal process of the institutional collapse of the Asia Pacific Council (ASPAC) in 1973 by focusing on Malaysia's foreign policy behavior, and highlights implications for today's ASEAN. It argues that the institutional collapse of ASPAC was caused by Malaysia's withdrawal, which stemmed from a shift in its balance of ontological security from security dependence on the UK and the West to greater political autonomy in Southeast Asia.
650 _aMALAYSIA
_x SECURITY
650 _aSOUTHEAST ASIA
650 _aASPAC
773 _aThe Pacific Review : Vol. 33, No 5, September 2020, pp. 842-871 (103)
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1080/09512748.2019.1596971
_z click for text
945 _i65780-1001
_rY
_sY
999 _c39974
_d39974