1 / 19

Soft Power and East Asian Integration: A Unifying or Dis-unifying Force?

Soft Power and East Asian Integration: A Unifying or Dis-unifying Force?. Kitti Prasirtsuk Thammasat University. Topics. 1. What is “soft power”? 2. Comparing Soft Power of China, Japan, and Korea 3. Soft Power as Unifying Force in East Asia

pilar
Télécharger la présentation

Soft Power and East Asian Integration: A Unifying or Dis-unifying Force?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Soft Power and East Asian Integration: A Unifying or Dis-unifying Force? Kitti Prasirtsuk Thammasat University

  2. Topics 1. What is “soft power”? 2. Comparing Soft Power of China, Japan, and Korea 3. Soft Power as Unifying Force in East Asia 4. Soft Power as Dis-unifying Force in East Asia Conclusion

  3. 1. What is soft power? • Not hard power (military, coercive nature) • persuasive power, ability to shape preferences; attraction, admiration, reputation • E.H. Carr (1939): Power over opinion • Joseph Nye (2004): 1) culture 2) values 3) diplomacy overlapped, e.g. cultural diplomacy • Resources / tools (not always necessarily turned to effect) • Soft power is a type of power, so has realist connotation – competition

  4. 2. Comparison: China, Japan, Korea

  5. China’s soft power: Culture • Ethnic Chinese as cultural agents  more in every day life • Chinese new year, Chinese medicine, Fangshui, Taichi etc. • Confucian Institute (CI): 13 CIs in Thailand • Learning Chinese language

  6. China’s Pop Culture • China is not inclined to promote liberal pop culture. • Movies filled w political agenda, esp. period movies, e.g. Confucius, The Founding of the Republic  not much popular * China: strong on traditional culture but weak on contemporary pop culture

  7. China’s Values/Ideas/Concepts • “harmonious world” • “Peaceful Rise” • “Beijing Consensus” • “factory of the world”: from low-tech to hi-tech products (including high-speed train)

  8. China’s Diplomacy • “peaceful rise” • “good neighbor policy” • Economic assistance Limitations: - support/indifferent to authoritarian regimes - recently, more assertive China - inconsistent, preoccupied w/ domestic development - needs to be more responsive to people

  9. Japan’s Culture • Strong on both traditional and pop culture “comprehensive” • tea ceremony , flower arrangement, Zen Buddhism/philosophy, judo, etc. • Manga, anime, games, karaoke, fashion, celebrities, food, green tea, “kawaii” (cuteness), etc. * “liberal pop culture” e.g. otaku, gay cartoon

  10. Japan’s Values/Ideas/Concepts • innovative and resilient • 1980s “Developmental State”, J management (kaizen, JIT, TQC, 5S), lean production • 2000s: human security: ODA-GGP; Environment: “Cool Earth 50”, “Cool Biz”

  11. Japan’s Diplomacy • Japan’s cultural diplomacy since the “heart-to-heart” Fukuda Doctrine • Japan Foundation, Nippon-maru, exchange programs • ODA, FDI, PKO • Non-traditional security (e.g. anti-piracy in Malacca Strait)

  12. Korea’s Culture • Strong on pop culture, but increasingly adding traditional elements through TV series • Korean Wave: drama, movies, music, fashion, cosmetics, tourism  business profits + really boosting Korea’s reputation

  13. Korea’s Values/Ideas/Concepts • ?? • Only recent efforts - ODA (on Aid Effectiveness) • an alternative development model: successful modernization + democratization (Seoul Consensus?) • Anti-corruption • Green Growth (through GGGI) • Yeosu Expo 2012: marine environment

  14. Korea’s Soft Power • Late comer • “from business interests to international contribution and high-profile roles” - Preoccupied w post-crisis recovery  pop culture exports (also for tourism) “Korean Wave” - But now taking off quite strongly

  15. Korea’s Diplomacy • Key positions in IOs (e.g. WHO, UN) • Development experience: successful modernization and democratization • Korea as “middle power” • Joined OECD-DAC in 2009 • G20 (host and Presidential Committee) • Nuclear Security Summit

  16. Summary • Tendency to overestimate China’s soft power and underestimate Japan’s soft power. • Japan has an upper hand in terms of resources, but still needs to enhance. • Korea is now up and coming.

  17. 3. Soft Power as Unifying Force in East Asia Opportunity for East Asian Integration • Asian middle class culture: common lifestyles, esp. the youngsters • Competition for increasing cooperation with ASEAN • Competition for public good

  18. 4. Soft Power as Dis-unifying Force in East Asia Challenge for East Asian Integration • Soft power that promotes “nationalism” • Reality doesn’t always meet expectation. • Soft power tends to be overrode by hard conflicts, esp. territorial disputes. • Tendency to increasingly use smart power: hard + soft power

  19. Conclusion • Three countries with strong soft power • Competition for good alternatives • Needs 2-way exchanges (from ASEAN to CJK as well) • Needs increasing cooperation among CJK (esp. on diplomacy). • From ASEAN+1 to East Asia

More Related