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Advanced Networks in International Relations: Case of Northeast Asia Hub

Explore the role of advanced networks in promoting international cooperation among China, Japan, and Korea, and the competition for becoming a hub in Northeast Asia. Discuss the effects of institutional mechanisms, bargaining, and interdependence. Consider the perspectives of liberalism, realism, and hegemonic stability theory.

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Advanced Networks in International Relations: Case of Northeast Asia Hub

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  1. Advanced Networks in view of International Relations (BoF)- Case: Hub of AN in Northeast Asia The 16th APAN/ANC August 27, Busan Marriott Hang Ryeol Na, KISDI

  2. CJK • China, Japan and Korea • international cooperation • APII, TEIN, etc. • competition • To be a hub • A single hub or joint hubs?

  3. Advanced Networks • International cooperation • Liberalism • states can cooperate together through institutional mechanisms and bargaining that undermine the propensity to base interests simply in military terms. States are interdependent and other actors such as Transnational Corporations, the IMF and the United Nations play a role. • competition • realism • basic motive driving states is survival or the maintenance of sovereignty; states are instrumentally rational and think strategically about how to survive. • A single hub or joint hubs? • Hegemonic Stability theory • stability of the international system requires a single dominant state to articulate and enforce the rules of interaction among the most important members of the system

  4. Discussion

  5. Thank you john@kisdi.re.kr

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