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Past Event

CNAPS

Democracy, Nationalism, and Security in the Asia Pacific Region

Taiwan, Northeast Asia, Asia


Event Summary

CNAPS, in cooperation with the Institute for National Policy Research (INPR) and the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, convened its fourth annual fall conference on November 12, 2004 in Taipei. Three panels met to discuss "Democracy, Nationalism, and Security in the Asia Pacific Region." Panelists discussed the East Asian security environment from global and regional perspectives; growing nationalism in China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan and implications for intra-regional relations; and the impact of Taiwan's democratization on regional security. Speakers included Brookings scholars as well as senior Taiwan government officials, scholars from across the region, journalists, and business leaders. Over one hundred members of Taipei's government, diplomatic, scholarly, and press communities attended the conference.

Event Information

When

Wednesday, November 12, 2003
12:00 AM to

Where

Falk Auditorium
Taipei, Taiwan
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

Brookings president Strobe Talbott gave welcoming remarks, along with co-host Lo Chih-cheng of INPR and Michael Kau, deputy minister of foreign affairs and president of the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy. John Thornton, Chair of Brookings Board of Trustees, moderated the first panel on security issues; vice president and director of foreign policy studies James Steinberg discussed the global security environment following the Iraq war. Brookings fellow Charles "Jack" Pritchard discussed the impact of the North Korea nuclear situation on regional stability, and CNAPS director Richard Bush commented on Taiwan's relationship with China. Paul Hsu and Frank Ching, members of the CNAPS Advisory Council, discussed the new Chinese leadership's views regarding regional security and Taiwan-China economic relations. Former CNAPS visiting fellow Jae Ho Chung spoke about both Chinese and Korean nationalism. Tsai Ing-wen, then chair of Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council, was keynote speaker at the conference luncheon. She discussed Taiwan-China relations.

Transcript

STROBE TALBOTT: Thank you very much, Chih-cheng. Let me just add a few words by way of echoing and perhaps amplifying what Chih-cheng said. First of all, thank you for the wake-up call. I do not think any more will be required for the next day or so. But staying with your metaphor, I have no doubt whatsoever that on an intellectual Richter scale, today's conference will hit at least 7.0.

Let me just add a word or two about why my colleagues from the Brookings Institution, and particularly the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies, are so glad to be here. In part, it is because of the history and mission of the Brookings Institution, which goes back nearly 90 years. Brookings has always been dedicated to constructive deliberation and debate and also objective, scholarly, wide-ranging, fact-based analysis of major public policy issues.

There is no doubt that this conference is very much in that spirit. This conference is also in the spirit of something else that we believe in very much at Brookings, and that is to try to make our institution more international and indeed more global.H' 

In recent years, we have increasingly dedicated ourselves to working in collaboration with colleagues and counterpart organizations around the world, and we are very fortunate in having a partner here in Taipei in the Institute for National Policy Research, which is, as you all know, one of the first independent think tanks to emerge in Taiwan after the political liberalization of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Our organizations have been collaborating ever since, and Chih-cheng and I have been conspiring off on the margins of this conference over the last couple of days to think of ways that we can broaden our collaboration in the future.

As Chih-cheng has said, this conference is going to focus on the intersection and indeed the interaction of, on the one hand, factors of domestic politics and public opinion; and on the other hand, the imperatives of regional security.

I think that that in itself is worth noting as a topic that would be appropriate in this region of the world. It was not always the case that that would have been a terribly relevant topic, because 20 or 30 years ago, quite frankly, public opinion did not count for very much in many countries in this region. But the last decades have seen a dramatic and largely positive change. What had been authoritarian regimes are in many cases now vibrant democracies, and that development has altered forever the challenge that political leaders have in managing national security.

It is against that backdrop that INPR and Brookings have assembled what I think is an outstanding group of experts to explore the interplay of democracy, nationalism and security in East Asia.

To begin our discussion, we are privileged to have as our keynote speaker Michael Kau. I think that in three respects Dr. Kau epitomizes the mission and the values represented by think tanks like Brookings and INPR. First, he is a true scholar. He is a graduate of the National Taiwan University. He has a doctorate from Cornell. He was on the faculty of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, and he is the author of a number of important books on Taiwan and China.

conference agenda (PDF-201kb)
introduction and panel 1, Security Environment in East Asia: Worsening or Improving? (PDF-237kb)
luncheon speech by Mainland Affairs Council Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen (PDF-73kb)
panel 2, Asian Nationalism and Implications for the Region (PDF-242kb)
panel 3, Democratic Development in Taiwan and its Implications for Regional Security (PDF-134kb)

Participants

Luncheon Speech

Tsai Ing Wen

Chairwoman, Mainland Affairs Council

PANEL I: Security Environment in East Asia: Worsening or improving? Moderated by

John L. Thornton

Chair, Board of Trustees, The Brookings Institution
Professor, Global Leadership, Tsinghua University, Beijing

PANEL II: Asian Nationalism and Implications for the Region; Moderated by

Richard C. Bush III

Director, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies

PANEL III: Democratic Development in Taiwan and its Implications for Regional Security; Moderated by

Lo Chih-cheng

Executive Director, Institute for National Policy Research
Associate Professor of Political Science, Soochow University

Panelists

Chao Chien-min

Sun Yat-sen Graduate Institute, Chengchi University

Charles L. Pritchard

Visiting Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies

Frank Ching

Senior Columnist, South China Morning Post, Hong Kong
Member, CNAPS Advisory Council

Jae Ho Chung

Professor of International Relations, Seoul National University

James B. Steinberg

Nonresident Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy

Lai I-Chung

Director of Foreign Policy Studies, Taiwan Thinktank

Paul Hsu

Chairman and CEO, Phycos International Co., Ltd.
Professor of Law, National Taiwan University; President, Epoch Foundation

Philip Yang

National Taiwan University

Richard C. Bush III

Director, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies

Yun-han Chu

President, Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation

Welcoming Remarks

Lo Chih-cheng

Executive Director, Institute for National Policy Research
Associate Professor of Political Science, Soochow University

Michael Ying-mao Kao

President, Taiwan Foundation for Democracy
Deputy Minister, Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Strobe Talbott

President, The Brookings Institution


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