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文献信息
The Pacific Review provides a major platform for the study of the international interactions of the countries of the Asia-Pacific. Our definition of the Asia-Pacific region is wide, encompassing its subregions in Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia, and Australasia, and the Pacific, and emergent conceptions of the Indo-Pacific. However, for those states and issues that extend to the wider Indo-Pacific but are outside the more traditional notions of the Asia-Pacific region, such as in South Asia and the Indian Ocean regions, the journal's interest is in submissions that speak to interactions influencing the politics of the Asia-Pacific rather than the politics of those regions themselves. The journal's primary focus is on international politics in the broadest understandings of the term, allowing for contributions on foreign policy, security, military strategy, international relations, the international political economy of trade, finance and development, and the political drivers and consequences of transnational issues such as culture and national identity, democratisation, the environment, migration, and new technologies. We have a particular interest in how the region is understood, defined, conceived of, and organised.
FOREIGN POLICYSoutheast AsianInternational RelationsRegional Securitythe PacificSouth China SeaCivil SocietyPolitical EconomyDevelopmental StateEconomic InterdependenceDomestic PoliticsSino-Japanese RelationsBalance of PowerRegional CooperationEASTEconomic CooperationInternational SystemHuman RightsSecurity Policythe Asian Financial Crisis
vol.38 (2025)
vol.37 (2024)
vol.36 (2023)
vol.35 (2022)
vol.34 (2021)
vol.33 (2020)
vol.32 (2019)
vol.31 (2018)
vol.30 (2017)
vol.29 (2016)
vol.28 (2015)
vol.27 (2014)
vol.26 (2013)
vol.25 (2012)
vol.24 (2011)
vol.23 (2010)
vol.22 (2009)
vol.21 (2008)
vol.20 (2007)
vol.19 (2006)
vol.18 (2005)
vol.17 (2004)
vol.16 (2003)
vol.15 (2002)
vol.14 (2001)
vol.13 (2000)
vol.12 (1999)
vol.11 (1998)
vol.10 (1997)
vol.9 (1996)