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David Arase, International Relations of East Asia: Structures, Institutions and International Order, International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, Volume 21, Issue 2, May 2021, Pages 331–334, https://doi.org/10.1093/irap/lcaa015
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This book is intended to serve two purposes that usually do not suit each other well. One is to introduce the internal cultural, social, historical, political, and economic factors that have shaped East Asia into the region it is today. Xiaoming Huang discusses them in separate chapters. The other is to construct an overarching narrative that emphasizes the unity and endogeneity of regional relations that encompasses both Northeast and Southeast Asia from ancient times through the present and into the future (p. 4).
Despite a number of small copy-editing glitches, the book is well organized and clearly written for easy student comprehension. It presents an impressive survey of the academic literature on East Asian area studies touching on the history, societies, comparative politics, international politics, and political economies of China, Northeast Asia, and Southeast Asia. It uses a conventional model of international politics that is derived from structural realism, i.e.,...
