Webinar: "China-Vietnam: Legal Development Assistance as Foreign Policy"

June 1, 2023

A Franco-German Observatory of the Indo-Pacific webinar hosted by Jérôme Doyon (CERI SciencesPo) and Heike Holbig (German Institute for Global and Area Studies).

 

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Speakers:

  • Professor Matthew S. Erie, University of Oxford. His current research project, “China, Law and Development" (CLD) examines China’s approach to law in its global development.
  • Dr Hai Ha Do is a Research Fellow at the Asian Law Centre, Melbourne Law School and, previously, a PDRA on the CLD project. His research focuses broadly on legal reform and transplantation in transitional socialist states, comparative and international labor law, constitutional law and the legal profession (with an emphasis on Vietnam).

 

Background to the webinar series:

The concept of the “Indo-Pacific” would first be used by strategic thinkers in India and Australia from around 2005. It was then subsequently picked up by the governments in New Delhi and in Canberra. These early adopters were followed by Japan, whose long-serving Prime Minister Shinzō Abe had already spoken in 2007 about the confluence of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, with policy-relevant ideas crystallising later around the idea of a “free and open Indo-Pacific.” In the United States, the Indo-Pacific entered the foreign policy lexicon in 2010, in the context of the US “pivot” to the Asia-Pacific region. Under the Donald Trump administration, the US mainstreamed the “free and open Indo-Pacific” as a policy concept during a tour of the president to the region in 2017. It then adopted, in 2018, a national-security strategy for the Indo-Pacific region, and renamed its former Pacific Command the “United States Indo-Pacific Command.”

A number of European countries, beginning with France, have also embraced this Indo-Pacific terminology. In May 2018, President Emmanuel Macron presented the French strategy in this region. The latter was then elaborated in a French Foreign Ministry policy paper. In October 2020, the German Foreign Ministry published a similar policy paper outlining its own vision for the region. A month later, the Dutch Foreign Ministry published its version and the UK government has also heralded a “pivot to the Indo-Pacific” as part of its quest for a “Global Britain” emerging out of Brexit.

Unfortunately, few Westerners – and particularly Europeans – have sought to understand the views and approaches of actors within the Indo-Pacific itself. The Franco-German Observatory of the Indo-Pacific seeks to fill this vacuum. There is a need to better understand especially the vital link between domestic political developments in these countries and their implications for regional dynamics in the wider Indo-Pacific. The Franco-German Observatory invites key actors from the Indo-Pacific to present their vision of the region, how they conceive of it geo-strategically and the place of China, the US, and Europe within this framework.