The South China Sea, a critical maritime corridor abundant in natural resources vital for global trade, has long been a locus of overlapping...
Vous n'êtes pas connecté
The Marcos administration’s multilateral approach in dealing with the challenges we face in the South China Sea has always been an aspiration, especially with fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, more so with countries that have overlapping claims in the Spratly Islands such as Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam.
The South China Sea, a critical maritime corridor abundant in natural resources vital for global trade, has long been a locus of overlapping...
By Tria Dianti Jakarta’s feisty response last week to the Chinese coast guard “disrupting” Indonesian survey activities in the North Natuna...
By Zhou Chao Indian media has recently reported that the Indian Ministry of External Affairs stated that China and India have reached an agreement...
By Alfred W. McCoy While the world looks on with trepidation at regional wars in Israel and Ukraine, a far more dangerous global crisis is...
Nationalism, regionalism and globalism are three paramount forces in contemporary international relations. But regionalism has experienced...
The “Go Green with Taiwan” project announces 16 semifinalists from 11 countries. The selected nations include Kenya, Canada, the UK,...
BRICS, a coalition comprising five major emerging economies—Brazil, Russia, China, India, and South Africa—collectively accounts for...
The role of migrant workers in the ASEAN region is crucial to the economies of the region. The mobility of labour enables workers to move around...
By Nguyen Khac Giang Vietnam has had to struggle to develop an efficient railway system due to financial and technical constraints. In 2010,...
The developing world arrived in Kazan, the capital of Republic of Tatarstan, driving by economic transformation proposals backed by the numerical...