The conventional understanding of Singapore's
foreign policy can be summarized in three main propositions: first, it is
dictated by the imperatives of being a small state; second, its primary
purpose is to ensure Singapore's survival, given its small size; and third,
this logic of survival dictates a realpolitik approach to foreign policy and
national security.
This book argues that an exclusively realist view of Singapore's foreign
policy is inadequate. Singapore's foreign policy is also shaped by the
positive effects of economic interdependence and regional
institution-building — instruments that realists tend to dismiss, but which
Singapore has self-consciously tried to promote as instruments of regional
order. The book first looks at the evolution of Singapore's foreign policy,
before analyzing Singapore's international relations and national security
in the context of economic growth and terrorism. It concludes with an
interesting chapter on the impact of the rise of China and India on the
regional landscape.
Key
Features
-
Challenges the conventional realist
understanding of Singapore’s foreign policy in
favor of a liberal institutionalist and social
constructivist approach
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Contains a collection of essays written between 1992 and 2005, thus
providing a picture of the evolution of Singapore’s foreign
policy
-
Covers topics such as the linkage between economics and national
security; globalization versus regionalization; terrorism;
regional, inter-regional and bilateral
cooperation; and the impact of the rise of
China and India
-
Includes past speeches by Lee Kuan Yew, S Rajaratnam,
S Dhanabalan and Tommy Koh on foreign policy
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Amitav
Acharya. 2007.
Singapore’s Foreign Policy: The Search for Regional Order. Institute of Policy Studies
and World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd.
(220
pages, ISBN-13
978-981-270-859-5,
ISBN-10: 981-270-859-6)
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