Vol.:(0123456789)
Chinese Political Science Review
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41111-020-00163-0
1 3
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Regionalism for Realists? The Evolution of the Indo‑Pacifc
Mark Beeson
1
· Troy Lee‑Brown
1
Received: 6 July 2020 / Accepted: 16 September 2020
© Fudan University 2021
Abstract
Neoliberal institutionalists frequently see regional organisations such as the EU,
ASEAN or the EAS as expressions of the desire for economic integration, politi-
cal cooperation and the resolution of collective action problems. In this formula-
tion, the creation of inclusive regional identities is seen as one of the potentially
desirable consequences of institution-building. The Indo-Pacifc, by contrast, has
since its inception been driven by a rather old-fashioned concern with the balance
of power in a part of the world in which China is once again playing a dominant and
destabilising role. We argue that realists still have much to tell us about the material
forces that are not only transforming the region—however, it is defned—but also
which underpin the rise to prominence of the Indo-Pacifc idea in particular. The
so-called ‘Quad’ countries are both the main drivers of the Indo-Pacifc concept and
a clear manifestation of its underlying goals and principles. In such circumstances,
we argue, the Indo-Pacifc is unlikely to reproduce even the rather modest levels of
institutionalisation achieved by other organisations, primarily because this vision of
the region is one that is not intended to address the sorts of collective action prob-
lems neoliberal institutionalists highlight. On the contrary, the Indo-Pacifc rescales
the region to include India and strategically aligns certain regional states in an old-
fashioned quasi-alliance to the strategic threat posed by China.
Keywords Indo-pacifc · Regionalism · Security · Quad
Troy Lee-Brown: e-mail: troy.lee-brown@research.uwa.edu.au
* Mark Beeson
mark.beeson@uwa.edu.au
Troy Lee-Brown
troy.lee-brown@research.uwa.edu.au
1
University of Western Australia, Crawley, Australia