From State to Society? Democracy and Regionalism in Southeast Asia
Discussion PaperAuthor
Donald K. Emmerson - Stanford University
Published by
Centre for Strategic and International Studies in "The Inclusive Regionalist", Clara Joewono and Hadi Soesastro, eds, page(s): 263-273
September 2007
This essay was written in September 2007 in an interstitial if not pivotal moment:
between the 40th birthday of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in
Bangkok on 8 August, and the expected announcement of an ASEAN Charter at the 13th
summit of the Association in Singapore on 20 November. Future analysts may look back
on the 2007 Summit as a threshold event, or mere business as usual, or something in
between. Whatever their judgment, the intermission between the birthday of the
organization and that of its new charter seemed an appropriately transitional time to
comment, however briefly, on the Association and some of the challenges it faces.
I also wanted to link this essay to the person whom this Festschrift honors: Jusuf
Wanandi. Accordingly, I selected an op ed by him on ASEAN and its plans for a charter
first published in April 2006,1 and made it a basis for my own ruminations. In thus
responding to his ideas and using them as points of interpretive departure, I hoped to
illustrate the stimulus that he has provided for students of ASEAN, Southeast Asia, and
Indonesia over many years.
I was tempted to predict the content of the charter and its impact on ASEAN. But that
would have amounted to short-term speculation, and I could well have been wrong. I
chose instead to consider how questions of democracy may challenge the creativity of
ASEAN’s leaders and advisers in the longer run, whatever the text of its new charter does
or does not say.


