Contemporary SoutheosI Asia Vol. 34, No. 3 (2012), pp. 309-37 DOI: 10.1355/cs34-3a
©2012 1SEAS ISSN 0129-797X print / ISSN 1793-284X electronic
Spectres of Leifer: Insights on
Regional Order and Security for
Southeast Asia Today
SEE SENG TAN
Michael Leifer's passing over a decade ago has done little to diminish
the force of his scholarly ideas and their continued relevance to the
study of regional order and security of contemporary Southeast Asia.
Leifer's intellectual influence is apparent in the way analysts of different
theoretical persuasions continue to grapple with and debate over the
problem of regional order in Southeast Asia. In so doing, they rely on
terms of reference originally defined by Leifer. This article reviews and
assesses a number of noteworthy insights from Leifer's oeuvre against
the contemporary political-strategic situation of Southeast Asia and its
immediate extra-regional context. The insights include the elusiveness
of regional order, the primacy of the balance of power, and the
emphasis on conservation rather than innovation in the management
of regional security in Southeast Asia. While Leifer's ideas are by no
means timeless, they continue nonetheless to speak in telling ways to
the security challenges facing Southeast Asia today.
Keywords: regional order, balance of power, ASEAN, Southeast Asia.
Southeast Asia today faces a number of daunting security challenges.
Among other things, the steady rise of China's power and influence
in the region, and the lack of cohesion and unity among the member
countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
that it appears to have caused, has clearly unsettled the region.' The
SEE SENG TAN is Associate Professor, Deputy Director of the Institute
of Defence and Strategic Studies, and founding Head of the Centre for
Multilateralism Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
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