000 01360cam a22003377a 4500
999 _c168194
_d168194
020 _a9781849808682
020 _a1849808686
040 _cCUS
082 _a330
_bBUC/E
245 0 0 _aEast Asian economic integration: law, trade and finance/
_cedited by Ross O. Buckley, Richard Weixing Hu, Douglas W. Arner.
260 _aCheltenham, U.K.;
_aNorthampton, Mass. :
_bEdward Elgar,
_cc2011.
300 _aviii, 330 p. ;
_c24 cm.
440 _aAsian Commercial, Financial and Economic Law and Policy Series;
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _aCover; Copyright; Contents; Editors and contributors; Introduction; PART I The changing regional order and dynamics for cooperation -- 1. China, the US and regional institution building in East Asia -- 2. Who's afraid of Asian trade regionalism, and why? -- 3. Endemic institutional fragility in the face of dynamic economic integration in Asia: the case of transboundary pollution in Hong Kong; PART II Trade integration -- 4. Japan's FTA (EPA) and BIT strategy in the light of competitive dynamics -- 5. China's strategy for free trade agreements: political battle in the name of trade. -- 6. Bilateral and regional trade agreements in Asia: a skeptic's view -- 7. When 'failure' indicates success: understanding trade disputes between ASEAN members -- 8. East Asian investment treaties in the integration process: quo vadis?; PART III Financial integration -- 9. Global financial regulatory reforms: implications for East Asia -- 10. Legitimacy and power: the political dynamics of East Asian financial regionalism -- 11. Institutional completeness in the Chiang Mai Initiatives -- 12. Beyond the Multilateralized Chiang Mai Initiative: an Asian monetary fund. --13. The evolving role of the Asian Development Bank in the creation of an Asian Currency UnitConclusion; Index
651 0 _aEast Asia
_xForeign economic relations.
651 0 _aEast Asia
_xEconomic integration.
700 1 _aBuckley, Ross P., ed.
700 1 _aHu, Richard Weixing, ed.
700 1 _aArner, Douglas W., ed.
942 _cWB16