论证(复杂分析)
谈判
竞争
公司治理
经济安全
透视图(图形)
经济体制
经济治理
经济
制度经济学
国际关系
政治学
国际政治经济学
政治
政治经济学
经济增长
新古典经济学
宏观经济学
财务
计算机科学
化学
人工智能
生物化学
法学
作者
Kaewkamol Pitakdumrongkit
标识
DOI:10.1080/09692290.2020.1819371
摘要
This article introduces a new interpretative lens to enrich our understanding of a relationship between small states’ economic security and the terms of multilateral governance. It seeks to shed light on the question: “What causes such changes in the details of multilateral agreements?” by establishing the causal pathways linking countries’ economic security with their institutional responses and decisions to rejig particular arrangement terms. I argue that different types of major powers’ behavior – rivalry among themselves, their economic statecraft, and their gaining advantage in existing negotiation frameworks – undermine small states’ economic security differently, causing them to select dissimilar institutional responses and adjust dissimilar institutional rules. To test the argument, the case of the Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy (ACMECS) which was revamped in 2018 is examined. My work contributes to the literatures on economic security, small states’ institutional strategies, and seeks to stimulate more interdisciplinary research between International Relations and International Political Economy
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