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Bibliog
o raphy
og
r of
o
ASEAN-China
Relations

Bibliography-title&halftitle.indd 1

Tai Lieu Chat Luong

4/1/06 4:43:49 PM


Reproduced from Bibliography of ASEAN-China Relations compiled by Linda Yip Seong Chun (Singapore: Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies, 2006). This version was obtained electronically direct from the publisher on condition that
copyright is not infringed. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the prior permission of the Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies < >

The Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) was established as
an autonomous organization in 1968. It is a regional centre dedicated
to the study of socio-political, security and economic trends and
developments in Southeast Asia and its wider geostrategic and economic
environment.
The Institute’s research programmes are the Regional Economic
Studies (RES, including ASEAN and APEC), Regional Strategic and Political
Studies (RSPS), and Regional Social and Cultural Studies (RSCS).
ISEAS Publications, an established academic press, has issued
more than 1,000 books and journals. It is the largest scholarly publisher
of research about Southeast Asia from within the region. ISEAS


Publications works with many other academic and trade publishers and
distributors to disseminate important research and analyses from and
about Southeast Asia to the rest of the world.

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Bibliog
o raphy
og
r of
o
ASEAN-China
Relations
COMPILED BY

Linda Yip Seong Chun

Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
Singapore

Bibliography-title&halftitle.indd 2

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First published in Singapore in 2006 by ISEAS Publications
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
30 Heng Mui Keng Terrace
Pasir Panjang
Singapore 119614
E-mail:
Website: <>
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a
retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission
of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
This book is published under ISEAS ASEAN-China Study Programme funded by
Professor Saw Swee-Hock.

© 2006 Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore
The responsibility for facts and opinions in this publication rests exclusively with the
compiler and her interpretations do not necessarily reflect the views or the policy of the
publisher or its supporters.

ISEAS Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
Yip Seong Chun, Linda.
Bibliography of ASEAN-China relations.
1. ASEAN countries—Relations—China—Bibliography.
2. China—Relations—ASEAN countries—Bibliography.
3. Southeast Asia—Relations—China—Bibliography.
4. China—Relations—ASEAN countries—Bibliography.
I. Title
Z3221 Y52
2006
ISBN 981-230-380-4 (hard cover)

Typeset by Superskill Graphics Pte Ltd
Printed in Singapore by Utopia Press Pte Ltd

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Contents

Preface
1
2
3

4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16


vii

ASEAN Documents
General
Bilateral Relations
Cambodia
Indonesia
Laos
Malaysia
Myanmar
Philippines
Singapore
Thailand
Vietnam
Borderlands and Border Issues
Economic Relations
Education
Finance and Investment
Foreign Policy
Foreign Relations
Free Trade Area
Greater Mekong Subregion
Maritime Issues and Territorial Disputes
Regionalism and Regional Cooperation
Security Cooperation and Issues
Socio-cultural Issues
Trade Relations

1

7
13
13
13
17
18
20
21
22
24
26
35
42
54
56
64
71
91
98
101
112
121
129
136

Author Index

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Preface

This bibliography is one of the many projects conducted under the
ASEAN-China Study Programme of the Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies.
The scope of this bibliography is limited to relations between China
and ASEAN as a group, and bilaterally with the ten ASEAN member
states. The 999 entries comprise English language journal articles,
conference and working papers, documents and unpublished works,
books and book chapters, and dissertations. The titles were sourced
from the various databases (SEALion, SEABase, SEAText, ASEAN
Bibliography) of the ISEAS Library as well as those of selected
institutions in Australia, China, Britain, and Singapore. These included
the National University of Singapore (NUS), Nanyang Technological
University, East Asian Institute of the NUS, and the University of Hong
Kong. The core entries were taken from 219-title “ASEAN-China
Relations: A Select Bibliography” published by the ISEAS Library in
June 2004 and from a list of 153 titles compiled by Dr Sheng Lijun and
Ms Ge Juan of ISEAS.
The entries are listed alphabetically by author under broad subject
categories. Where there are two or more titles by one author, the entries
are cited alphabetically by title. Southeast Asian names, especially Malay,
Thai, Vietnamese, Laotian or Cambodian, are entered in direct order,
for example, Sarasin Viraphol, not Viraphol, Sarasin. An Author Index is

included to facilitate referencing.
At press time, a new publication came to my attention but it was too
late to include eleven relevant chapters in this Bibliography. The title of
the book is Malaysia, Southeast Asia and the Emerging China: Political,
Economic and Cultural Perspectives, edited by Hou Kok Chung and

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viii

PREFACE

Yeoh Kok-Kheng (Kuala Lumpur: Institute of China Studies, 2005).
Also, the International Conference on “China and Malaysia in the Era
of Globalization: Country, Regional and International Perspectives”, jointly
organized by the Institute of China Studies, University of Malaya, and
the Institute of Malaysian Studies, Xiamen University, at the Mines
Beach Resort and Spa, Selangor, Malaysia on 21–22 March 2006, deserves
a mention here.
Acknowledgement is due to Professor Saw Swee-Hock, Professorial
Fellow at ISEAS, for his guidance, Ms Ch’ng Kim See, Head, ISEAS
Library, for her encouragement and professional advice, and Mrs Triena
Ong, Managing Editor of ISEAS Publications Unit for overseeing the
publication of this book.


Linda Yip Seong Chun
March 2006

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1
ASEAN Documents

1.

Action Plan to Formulate a Technology Platform
“Action Plan to Formulate a Technology Platform for
Earthquake-Generated Tsunami Warning System, Beijing,
China, 25–26 January 2005,” />17249.htm.

2.

Agreement on Dispute Settlement Mechanism
“Agreement on Dispute Settlement Mechanism of the
Framework Agreement on Comprehensive Economic CoOperation between the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
and the People’s Republic of China,” />16635.htm.

3.

Agreement on Trade in Goods

“Agreement on Trade in Goods of the Framework Agreement
on Comprehensive Economic Co-operation between the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the People’s
Republic of China,” />
4.

ASEAN
Joint Statement of the Meeting of Heads of State/Government of
the Member States of ASEAN and the President of the People’s
Republic of China, Kuala Lumpur, 16 December 1997. Jakarta:
ASEAN Secretariat, 1997.

5.

ASEAN
Statement by the ASEAN Foreign Ministers on the Recent
Development in the South China Sea, 18 March 1995. Jakarta:
ASEAN Secretariat, 1995.
1

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2

BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

6.

ASEAN-China
“ASEAN-China,” />
7.

ASEAN-China
“ASEAN-China,” />
8.

ASEAN-China Dialogue
“ASEAN-China Dialogue,” />
9.

ASEAN-China Dialogue Relations
“ASEAN-China Dialogue Relations,” />5874.htm.

10.

ASEAN Declaration
“ASEAN Declaration on the South China Sea, Manila,
Philippines 22 July 1992.” ASEAN Document Series 1992–
1994: 90.


11.

ASEAN Secretariat, comp.
ASEAN Economic Co-operation: Transition and Transformation.
Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1997.

12.

Basic Framework of ASEAN-Mekong Basin
“Basic Framework of ASEAN-Mekong Basin Development
Cooperation, Kuala Lumpur, 17 June 1996,” http://www.
aseansec.org/6353.htm.

13.

Beijing Declaration of the Ministers
“Beijing Declaration of the Ministers Responsible for Youth of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the People’s
Republic of China on ASEAN-China Cooperation on Youth,
Beijing, China, 29 September 2004.” ASEAN Documents Series
2004: 255–256.

14.

Chairman’s Statement of the First ASEAN+China
“Chairman’s Statement of the First ASEAN+China, Japan,
Korea (ASEAN+3) Deputy Finance Ministers and Deputy
General Bank Governors Meeting, Ha Noi, Vietnam, 10 March
1999.” ASEAN Document Series 2004: 212–213.


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ASEAN Documents

3

15.

Declaration on the Conduct of Partners
“Declaration on the Conduct of Partners in the South China
Sea”, />
16.

Deepening ASEAN-China Strategic Management
“Deepening ASEAN-China Strategic Management: Chairman’s
Statement of the 8th ASEAN+China Summit, Vientiane, Laos,
29 November 2004.” ASEAN Document Series 2004: 6–7.

17.

Forging Closer ASEAN-China
“Forging Closer ASEAN-China Economic Relations in the 21st
Century: Report submitted by the ASEAN-China Economic
Cooperation Expert Group, October 2001,” http://www.
aseansec.org/4979.htm.


18.

Framework Agreement
“Framework Agreement on Comprehensive Economic Cooperation between the Association of South East Asian Nations
and the People’s Republic of China,” />13196.htm.

19.

Instrument of Accession
“Instrument of Accession to the Treaty of Amity and
Cooperation in Southeast Asia, 8 October 2003,” http://
www.aseansec.org/15271.htm.

20.

Instrument of Extension
“Instrument of Extension of the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation
in Southeast Asia,” />
21.

Joint Declaration of the Heads of State/Government
“Joint Declaration of the Heads of State/Government of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the People’s
Republic of China on Strategic Partnership for Peace and
Prosperity,” />
22.

Joint Declaration
“Joint Declaration of ASEAN and China on Cooperation in

the Field of Non-traditional Security Issues (Phnom Penh,

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

4 November 2002) 2002/11/12,” />topics/3748/t19202.htm.
23.

Joint Media
“Joint Media Statement of the Second ASEAN and China
Transport Ministers Meeting 25 October 2003, Yangon,
Myanmar,” />
24.

Joint Media
“Joint Media Statement of the 6th ASEAN Economic Ministers
and the Ministers of PRC, Japan, Korea Consultation (AEM+3),
Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 3 September 2003.” ASEAN Document
Series 2004: 208.

25.


Joint Media
“Joint Media Statement of the 3rd Meeting of the ASEAN,
China, Japan and Korea Tourism Ministers (3rd M-ATM+3),
Vientiane, Laos, 3 February 2004.” ASEAN Document Series
2004: 208.

26.

Joint Ministerial
“Joint Ministerial Statement of the ASEAN, China, Japan and
Korea Energy Ministers Meeting (AMEM+3), Makati City,
Metro Manila, Philippines, 9 June 2004.” ASEAN Document
Series 2004: 168–169.

27.

Joint Ministerial
“Joint Ministerial Statement of the ASEAN+3 Finance
Ministers Meeting, Makati, Philippines 7 August 2003.” ASEAN
Document Series 2004: 168–169.

28.

Joint Statement
“Joint Statement of the Special ASEAN-China Leaders Meeting
on the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) Bangkok,
29 April 2003,” />
29.

Kuala Lumpur

“Kuala Lumpur Declaration on the ASEAN Plus Three Summit

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ASEAN Documents

5

Kuala Lumpur, 12 December 2005,” />18036.htm.
30.

Memorandum of Understanding
“Memorandum of Understanding between the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Secretariat and the Ministry
of Agriculture of the People’s Republic of China on Agricultural
Cooperation,” />
31.

Memorandum of Understanding
“Memorandum of Understanding between the Governments
of the Member Countries of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the Government of the People’s
Republic of China on Cooperation in the Field of Nontraditional Security Issues, Bangkok, Thailand, on 10 January
2004,” />
32.


Memorandum of Understanding
“Memorandum of Understanding between the Governments
of the Member Countries of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations and the Government of the People’s Republic
of China on Transport Cooperation Vientiane, 27 November
2004,” />
33.

Memorandum of Understanding
“Memorandum of Understanding between the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations and The People’s Republic of China
on Cooperation in Information and Communications
Technology,” />
34.

Plan of Action to Implement the Joint Declaration
“Plan of Action to Implement the Joint Declaration on
ASEAN-China Strategic Partnership for Peace and Prosperity,”
/>
35.

Protocol to Amend the Framework Agreement
“Protocol to Amend the Framework Agreement on
Comprehensive Economic Co-operation between the

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

Association of South East Asian Nations and the People’s
Republic of China, 6 October 2003,” />15157.htm.
36.

Statement by the ASEAN Finance Ministers
“Statement by the ASEAN Finance Ministers and the Finance
Ministers of Australia, China, Hong Kong SAR China, Japan,
Korea and the United States. Kuala Lumpur, 2 December
1997.” ASEAN Economic Bulletin 14, no. 3 (1998): 317.

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2
General

37.

ALEXANDER, Garth

The Invisible China: The Overseas Chinese and the Politics of
Southeast Asia. London: Macmillan, 1974.

38.

DANIELS, Christian
“Consolidation and Restructure: Ming Administration and Tai
Polities during the 15th Century.” Paper presented at the
Workshop on Southeast Asia in the 15th Century and the
Ming Factor, Singapore, 18–19 July 2003.

39.

DAVID, M. D. and GHOBLE, T. R.
India, China, and South-East Asia: Dynamics of
Development. New Delhi: Deep & Deep Publications, 2000.

40.

FITZGERALD, C. P.
China and Southeast Asia since 1945. Camberwell: Longman,
1973.

41.

FRANKE, Wolfgang
“China in Modern Southeast Asia.” In Sino-Malaysiana: Selected
Papers on Ming & Qing History and on the Overseas Chinese in
Southeast Asia 1942–1988, pp. 421–436. Singapore: South Seas
Society, 1989.


42.

GRANT, Richard L., ed.
China and Southeast Asia: Into the Twenty-first Century. Honolulu:
Pacific Forum; Washington, D.C.: CSIS, 1993.

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8

BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

43.

KONG Yuanzhi
“Investigation on Temples of Zheng He in Southeast Asia.”
Paper presented at the Workshop on Southeast Asia in the
15th Century and the Ming Factor, Singapore, 18–19 July
2003.

44.

LI Jin Ming
“Zheng He’s Expeditions and the Friendly Intercourse between

China and Southeast Asia.” Southeast Asian Affairs 1 (2003):
62–69.

45.

MIKSIC, John
“Before and After Zheng He: Comparing Some Archaeological
Sites of the 14th and 15th Centuries.” Paper presented at the
Workshop on Southeast Asia in the 15th Century and the
Ming Factor, Singapore, 18–19 July 2003.

46.

ONG Keng Yong
“Securing a Win-win Partnership for ASEAN and China.” In
ASEAN-China Relations: Realities and Prospects, edited by Saw
Swee-Hock, Sheng Lijun and Chin Kin Wah, pp. 19–26.
Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2005.

47.

OTT, Marvin C.
China and Southeast Asia. SAIS Policy Forum Series, no. 15
Baltimore, MD: School of Advanced International Studies,
Johns Hopkins University, 2002.

48.

PARMER, J. Norman
“Historical Perspectives on Chinese in Southeast Asia.” In

Chinese Populations in Contemporary Southeast Asian Societies:
Identities, Interdependence and International Influence, edited
by M. Jocelyn Armstrong, R. Warwick Armstrong, and Kent
Mulliner, pp. 18–54. Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Press, 2001.

49.

PHAM Duc Thanh
“ASEAN in the Early Decades of 21st Century and its Relations
with China.” Paper presented at the International Conference
“Towards an Integrated Community: China and Southeast

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General

9

Asia in the 21st Century”, Shanghai, China, 7–9 September
2004.
50.

PORTER, Gareth
“China in Southeast Asia.” Current History 85, no. 512 (1986):
249–252; 278–279.


51.

RAMACHANDRAN, K. N.
“China and Southeast Asia.” IDSA Journal 15, no. 2 (1982):
251–259.

52.

REID, Anthony, ed.
Sojourners and Settlers: Histories of Southeast Asia and the Chinese
in Honour of Jennifer Cushman. St. Leonards, NSW: Asian
Studies Association of Australia in association with Allen &
Unwin, 1996.

53.

SALMON, Claudine
“The Contribution of the Chinese to the Development of
Southeast Asia: A New Appraisal.” Journal of Southeast Asian
History XII, no. 1 (1981): 260–275.

54.

SCALAPINO, Robert A.
“China’s Role in Southeast Asia: Looking Toward the Twentyfirst Century.” In China and Southeast Asia: Into the Twenty-first
Century, edited by Richard L. Grant, pp. 53–66. Honolulu:
Pacific Forum; Washington, D.C.: CSIS, 1993.

55.


SHEE Poon Kim
ASEAN and the People’s Republic of China. Institute of
Humanities and Social Sciences, Nanyang University.
Occasional Paper Series no. 53. Singapore: Nanyang University,
1976.

56.

SIN Yue Duk
The Development of Greater China: Prospects and Challenges for
ASEAN. ASEAN Briefing no. 33. Singapore: Development
Bank of Singapore, Economic Research Department, 1993.

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10

BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

57.

STUART-FOX, Martin
A Short History of China and Southeast Asia: Tribute, Trade and
Influence. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin. 2003.


58.

SURYADINATA, Leo, ed.
Admiral Zheng He and Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies, 2005.

59.

SURYADINATA, Leo
Chinese and Nation-building in Southeast Asia. Singapore:
Marshall Cavendish, 2004.

60.

SURYADINATA, Leo
“Chinese Migration in Southeast Asia: Past and Present.” Paper
presented at the lecture on “China-from Middle Kingdom to
Hub of Asia? Cultural, Political and Economic Interfaces
between China and Southeast Asia, Frankfurt, 1–6 June 2005.

61.

SURYADINATA, Leo, ed.
Ethnic Chinese as Southeast Asians. Singapore: Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies; New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1997.

62.

SURYADINATA, Leo, ed.

Political Thinking of the Indonesian Chinese, 1900–1995: A
Sourcebook. 2nd ed. Singapore: Singapore University Press,
1997.

63.

SURYADINATA, Leo, ed.
The Ethnic Chinese in the ASEAN States: Bibliographical Essays.
Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1989.

64.

VATIKIOTIS, Michael R. J.
“Catching the Dragon’s Tail: China and Southeast Asia in the
21st Century.” Contemporary Southeast Asia 25, no. 1 (2003):
65–78.

65.

WANG Gungwu
“China and Southeast Asia.” Paper Read to Financial Times
Meeting in Bangkok, June 1976.

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General

11

66.

WANG Gungwu
China and Southeast Asia: Myths, Threats and Culture. EAI
Occasional Paper no. 13. Singapore: East Asian Institute,
National University of Singapore, 1999.

67.

WANG Gungwu
Community and Nation: China, Southeast Asia and
Australia. Southeast Asian Publications Series no. 23. St
Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin for Asian Studies Association
of Australia, 1992.

68.

WANG Gungwu
“Patterns of Chinese Migration in Historical Perspective.” In
Observing Change in Asia: Essays in Honour of J.A.C. Mackie,
edited by R. J. May and W. J. O’Malley, pp. 38–48. Bathurst,
NSW: Crawford House, 1989.

69.

WANG Gungwu

“Political Chinese: Their Contribution to Modern Southeast
Asian History.” In Southeast Asia in the Modern World, edited
by Bernard Grossman, pp. 115–128. Wiesbaden: Otto
Harrassowitz, 1972.

70.

WANG Gungwu
“The Limits of Nanyang Chinese Nationalism, 1912–1937.” In
Southeast Asian History and Historiography: Essays Presented to
D.G.E. Hall, edited by C.D. Cowan and O.W. Wolters, pp.
405–423. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1976.

71.

WANG Gungwu
“The Southeast Asian Chinese and the Development of China.”
In Southeast Asian Chinese and China: The Politico-Economic
Dimension, edited by Leo Suryadinata, pp. 12–30. Singapore:
Times Academic Press, 1995.

72.

WILLIAMS, Lea Everard
The Future of the Overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia. New
York: McGraw-Hill for Council on Foreign Relations, 1966.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

73.

WONG C. H., John
ASEAN and China: Partners or Rivals in Development? Working
Paper 1996-6. Toronto: Centre for International Studies,
University of Toronto, 1996.

74.

Workshop on Southeast Asia
Workshop on Southeast Asia in the 15th Century and the
Ming Factor, Singapore, 18–19 July 2003 [organized by] Asia
Research Institute, National University of Singapore.

75.

YEN Ching Hwang
Overseas Chinese and the 1911 Revolution, with Special Reference
to Singapore and Malaya. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University
Press, 1976.

76.


YEN Ching Hwang
“Overseas Chinese Nationalism in Singapore and Malaya 1877–
1912.” Modern Asian Studies 16, no. 3 (1982): 397–425.

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3
Bilateral Relations

Cambodia
77.

KLINTWORTH, Gary
“The Outlook for Cambodia: The China Factor.” Pacific Review
3, no. 1 (1990): 70–72.

78.

ROSS, Robert S.
“China and the Cambodian Peace Process: The Value of
Coercive Diplomacy.” Asian Survey 31, no. 12 (1991): 1170–
1185.

79.


VICKERY, Michael
“Cambodia and its Neighbours in the 15th Century.” Paper
presented at the Workshop on Southeast Asia in the 15th
Century and the Ming Factor, Singapore, 18–19 July 2003.

Indonesia
80.

CHEN Li-Chi, Christopher
“The Nationalisation of Chinese-Indonesian Relations and the
Economic, Social and Political Repercussions on the Overseas
Chinese.” M. A. thesis, University of British Columbia, 1997.

81.

DJIWANDONO, Soedjati
Sino-Indonesian Relations in the 1990s and Beyond. Jakarta:
Centre for Strategic and International Studies, 1991.

82.

DRAKE, Earl
“Indonesia and China: Old Habits and New Internationalism.”
Pacific Review 4, no. 3 (1991): 214–221.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

83.

FIC, Victor M.
Anatomy of the Jakarta Coup October 1, 1965: The Collusion
with China which Destroyed the Army Command, President
Sukarno and the Communist Party of Indonesia. New Delhi:
Abhinav Publications, 2004.

84.

HARA, Fujio
“The North Kalimantan Communist Party and the People’s
Republic of China.” Developing Economies 43, no. 4 (2005):
489–513.

85.

HE Kai
Interpreting China-Indonesia Relations: “Good Neighbourliness”,
“Mutual Trust” and “All-round Corporation”. Canberra: Strategic
and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National
University, 2000.


86.

HOWIE, R. P. L.
“Sino-Indonesian Relations, 1950–65: A Study of the Chinese
People’s Republic’s Policy towards a Non-Communist State in
South East Asia.” Ph.D. thesis, University of Western Australia,
1966.

87.

HOWIE, R. P. L.
“Sino-Indonesian Relations, October 1965–April 1967.” Ph.D.
thesis, University of London, 1968.

88.

JU Woo Jung
The Rise and Fall of the Djakarta-Peking Axis, 1949–1966. Ann
Arbor: University Microfilms, 1970.

89.

LEIFER, Michael
“Indonesia’s Encounters with China and the Dilemmas of
Engagement.” In Engaging China: The Management of an
Emerging Power, edited by Alaistair Iain Johnston and Robert
S. Ross, pp. 87–108. London and New York: Routledge,
1999.

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Bilateral Relations

15

90.

LIU Hong
“Constructing a China Metaphor: Sukarno’s Perception of the
PRC and Indonesia’s Political Transformation.” Journal of
Southeast Asian Studies 28, no. 1 (1997): 27–46.

91.

LIU Hong
“The China Metaphor: Indonesian Intellectuals and the PRC,
1949–1965.” Ph.D. thesis, Ohio University, 1995.

92.

PANGESTU, Mari
“The External Environment and China Factor: Implications
for Indonesia.” Indonesian Quarterly 32, no. 3 (2004): 237–242.

93.


SHEE Poon Kim
“China’s Responses to the May 1998 Anti-Chinese Riots in
Indonesia.” EAI Working Paper no. 37. Singapore: East Asian
Institute, National University of Singapore, 2000.

94.

SIMON, Sheldon W.
The Broken Triangle; Peking, Djakarta, and the PKI. Baltimore,
MD: Johns Hopkins Press in co-operation with the Institute
for Sino-Soviet Studies, George Washington University, 1969.

95.

SMITH, Anthony L.
“From Latent Threat to Possible Partner: Indonesia’s China
Debate.” Special Assessment: Asia’s China Debate. Honolulu:
Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, 2003.

96.

SOESASTRO, Hadi
After the Resumption of Diplomatic Relations: Aspects of SinoIndonesian Economic Relations. Jakarta: Centre for Strategic
and International Studies, 1991.

97.

SOESASTRO, Hadi
“Indonesia-China Relations.” In ASEAN and China: An Evolving

Relationship, edited by Joyce K. Kallgren, Noordin Sopiee and
Soedjati Djiwandono, pp. 217–238. Research Papers and Policy
Studies no. 24. Berkeley, CA: Institute of East Asian Studies,
University of California, 1988.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASEAN-CHINA RELATIONS

98.

SOESASTRO, Hadi
Indonesia-China Relations in the 1990s: Trade and Beyond. Jakarta:
Centre for Strategic and International Studies, 1990.

99.

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