[WEBCAST] Mini-Conference: The Giant Next Door – China In Southeast Asia
VIEW EVENT DETAILSDiscussing The Cases of Cambodia & Laos, and Indonesia & Malaysia, With Sebastian Strangio and Ben Bland
Registrations are now closed
Nowhere in the world is China’s emergence of economic, military and cultural presence more apparent than in the eleven countries of Southeast Asia: Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, East Timor and the Philippines. While the nations look at China with justified alarm, their responses differ vastly, from Cambodia and Laos having the closest ties with China, to Indonesia and Malaysia having fruitful economic, but complicated relationships. Southeast Asia, increasingly recognized as a crucial diplomatic player through the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and home to significant global trading routes, is not only of strategic importance to China. Once again it has become the focus of a global contest for power.
What are the historical turning points of China’s experience in Southeast Asia since the 1970s? Why is this region attractive to China and vice versa? With the countries’ approaches to China varying so greatly, what role does ASEAN play in shaping Southeast Asia’s policy towards China? And how much space for maneuver do Southeast Asian nations have with the region having become an arena for U.S.-China competition, and influences from Japan, India, South Korea, Russia and Australia?
For these and more questions, join our third online Mini-Conference. The conference begins with a keynote presentation by Sebastian Strangio, journalist and author of In the Dragon's Shadow: Southeast Asia in the Chinese Century. Next we host two parallel breakout sessions on Cambodia and Laos with Sebastian, and Indonesia and Malaysia with Ben Bland, director of the Southeast Asia Program at the Lowy Institute and author of Man of Contradictions: Joko Widodo and the struggle to remake Indonesia.
Program
06:30 – Opening remarks, and keynote presentation by Sebastian Strangio
07:00 – Breakout sessions A and B (see details below)
07:45 – Wrap up in plenum
07:50 – End of Mini-Conference
Session A: The Case of Cambodia and Laos
China is the largest source of development assistance and investment in both Cambodia and Laos. Both governments maintain close relations with China, where its presence is more marked than anywhere else in Southeast Asia. What makes Cambodia and Laos so recipient to China? What policies do they have towards China? What are China’s interests? And what are the biggest schisms between elite and public perceptions of China prevalent in Cambodia and Laos? Looking at concrete examples, we will be discussing these and more questions in this session with Sebastian Strangio.
Session B: The Case of Indonesia and Malaysia
China’s relations with the historically more remote, maritime and Muslim-majority countries Indonesia and Malaysia are complex and historically intertwined. For both Indonesia and Malaysia China is a vital economic partner, but tensions in the South China Sea and anti-China sentiments remain prevalent. How have Indonesia’s and Malaysia’s relations towards China evolved? How can we describe their foreign policy strategies? What are China’s interests? And which sentiments towards China does one encounter? In this session, we will have a close look at Indonesia and Malaysia, discussing these and more questions with Ben Bland.