Abstract
In this article, we examine the contours of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations’ (ASEAN) response to the latest regional challenge from Myanmar,
the 2021 coup. Scholars and practitioners alike often portray ASEAN as a
relatively cohesive community of states united in adherence to a long-held
and comparatively stable set of norms within the so-called “ASEAN way.”
Core among these norms has been domestic non-interference. However,
we argue that rather than being determined by a coherent set of agreed
norms, ASEAN’s response to this crisis has been shaped by intra-regional
contestation and division around how ASEAN ought to enact its particular
“way” of regional governance. More narrowly, we show that the ASEAN
response has been shaped by contestation over competing normative
impulses in the organization—centrality and non-interference—which
have developed in increasing tension since the humanitarian disaster after
Cyclone Nargis in 2008 and the Rohingya crisis after 2016. We show that in
response to these crises, officials from the organization and its member states
advanced divergent accounts of what ASEAN ought to do and why, given
competing normative commitments to centrality and non-interference. By
showing how ASEAN’s response to the 2021 coup is the result of internal
contestation within the organization, we support accounts of regional
governance in Southeast Asia that stress less the fixity of ASEAN norms than
their contestation in practice. To make our argument we analyze more than
250 documents and draw on interviews with regional officials.
Nations’ (ASEAN) response to the latest regional challenge from Myanmar,
the 2021 coup. Scholars and practitioners alike often portray ASEAN as a
relatively cohesive community of states united in adherence to a long-held
and comparatively stable set of norms within the so-called “ASEAN way.”
Core among these norms has been domestic non-interference. However,
we argue that rather than being determined by a coherent set of agreed
norms, ASEAN’s response to this crisis has been shaped by intra-regional
contestation and division around how ASEAN ought to enact its particular
“way” of regional governance. More narrowly, we show that the ASEAN
response has been shaped by contestation over competing normative
impulses in the organization—centrality and non-interference—which
have developed in increasing tension since the humanitarian disaster after
Cyclone Nargis in 2008 and the Rohingya crisis after 2016. We show that in
response to these crises, officials from the organization and its member states
advanced divergent accounts of what ASEAN ought to do and why, given
competing normative commitments to centrality and non-interference. By
showing how ASEAN’s response to the 2021 coup is the result of internal
contestation within the organization, we support accounts of regional
governance in Southeast Asia that stress less the fixity of ASEAN norms than
their contestation in practice. To make our argument we analyze more than
250 documents and draw on interviews with regional officials.
Original language | American English |
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Pages (from-to) | 773-294 |
Number of pages | 22 |
Journal | Pacific Affairs |
Volume | 97 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Dec 2024 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Political Science and International Relations