Affiliation:
1. Regent’s CollegeUK
2. Middlesex UniversityUK
Abstract
The Association of South East Nations (ASEAN) is a regional body working towards the integration of disparate states. The creation of a human rights mechanism, a critical part of this integration, confronts the central philosophy of ASEAN: deference to conservative notions of sovereignty and non-interference, often referred to as the ASEAN Way. This doctrine has been necessary to promote cooperation and trust between these neighbours but may prove incongruent with a human rights body that attempts to monitor and enforce international human rights law. This article looks at the challenges posed by the ASEAN way and how they developed in section 2. Section 3 follows with an examination of the ASEAN Way’s impact on the development of the regional human rights bodies. Section 4 addresses structural problems arising from the ASEAN Way: the limited human rights mandate; the lack of civil society participation; and the lack of common human rights standards among ASEAN states. Overall, this article examines the central irony that the while the ASEAN Way is necessary, it undermines the regional human rights body.
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
6 articles.
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1. Patterns of Regional Democracy, Human Rights, and Rule of Law Institutions;Regional Organizations and Democracy, Human Rights, and the Rule of Law;2022
2. Introduction;Regional Organizations and Democracy, Human Rights, and the Rule of Law;2022
3. The Institutionalisation of Human Rights in ASEAN;Challenges of Governance;2021
4. Introduction;Challenges of Governance;2021
5. Understanding the Tensions and Ambiguities in Southeast Asian Attitudes Towards Human Rights;Can ASEAN Take Human Rights Seriously?;2019-03-28