Southeast Asia Track II Diplomacy: The Role of ASEAN-ISIS in ASEAN Community Building
Keywords:
Track II diplomacy, ASEAN-ISIS, Think-tankAbstract
This article pursues three objectives. First, it provides an overview of the origins and evolution of Track II diplomacy in Southeast Asia over nearly four decades, focusing in particular on the institutional network of ASEAN-ISIS (the ASEAN Institutes of Strategic and International Studies). Second, it examines and assesses the policy role that ASEAN-ISIS has played as a think tank—one that has exerted a distinctive and tangible influence from its founding in 1988 to the present. The discussion centers on how the network has supported and advanced the work of ASEAN as a regional intergovernmental organization, whether through its initiatives, its policy proposals, or its constructive engagement in forums convened to debate security challenges and ASEAN's adaptation to strategic shifts in the region, particularly in the post–Cold War era. Third, it analyzes the achievements, limitations, and future trajectory of ASEAN-ISIS against the backdrop of geopolitical change across Asia and the Indo-Pacific. In doing so, it considers the proliferation of Track II institutions—both in number and in thematic breadth—at the level of individual ASEAN member states and across the wider Asia-Pacific, together with the growing role of civil society, in order to ask whether, and in what ways, these developments bear on the operations and future relevance of ASEAN-ISIS.
References
ASEAN Institutes of Strategic and International Studies, & Centre for Strategic and International Studies. (2001). An ASEAN of the people, by the people, for the people: Report of the First ASEAN People's Assembly, Batam, Indonesia, 24–26 November 2000. Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
ASEAN Institutes of Strategic and International Studies. (1988). Statutes of ASEAN-ISIS.
ASEAN Institutes of Strategic and International Studies. (1991, June 4). A time for initiative: Proposals for the consideration of the Fourth ASEAN Summit (Memorandum).
ASEAN Institutes of Strategic and International Studies. (2006). The ASEAN Charter (Memorandum).
ASEAN-ISIS. (2003). Towards an ASEAN economic community: A track two report to ASEAN policy makers. Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
Ball, D. (1999). Multilateral security cooperation in the Asia-Pacific region: Prospects and possibilities (Lecture Series Report No. 17). Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace.
Ball, D., & Kwa, C. G. (Eds.). (2010). Assessing Track 2 diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region: A CSCAP reader. Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University; S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Bunbongkarn, S. (2006). The future of ASEAN-ISIS. In H. Soesastro, C. Joewono, & C. G. Hernandez (Eds.), Twenty-two years of ASEAN-ISIS: Origin, evolution and challenges of Track Two diplomacy (pp. 141–148). Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Capie, D., & Evans, P. (2007). The Asia-Pacific security lexicon (2nd ed.). Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
Evans, P. M. (1994). Building security: The Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific (CSCAP). The Pacific Review, 7(2), 125–139. https://doi.org/10.1080/09512749408719081
Haas, P. M. (1992). Introduction: Epistemic communities and international policy coordination. International Organization, 46(1), 1–35. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818300001442
Hernandez, C. G. (2006). Track two and regional policy: The ASEAN-ISIS in ASEAN decision making. In H. Soesastro, C. Joewono, & C. G. Hernandez (Eds.), Twenty-two years of ASEAN-ISIS: Origin, evolution and challenges of Track Two diplomacy (pp. 17–30). Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Job, B. L. (2010). Track 2 diplomacy: Ideational contribution to the evolving Asian security order. In D. Ball & C. G. Kwa (Eds.), Assessing Track 2 diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region: A CSCAP reader (pp. 112–161). Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University; S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Katsumata, H., & Tan, S. S. (Eds.). (2007). People's ASEAN and governments' ASEAN (RSIS Monograph No. 11). S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Kerr, P. (1994). The security dialogue in the Asia-Pacific. The Pacific Review, 7(4), 397-409.
Kraft, H. J. S. (2000, December). Track three diplomacy and human rights in Southeast Asia: The case of the Asia-Pacific Coalition for East Timor (Paper presentation). Global Development Network 2000 Conference, Tokyo, Japan.
Kraft, H. J. S. (2010). The autonomy dilemma of Track 2 diplomacy in Southeast Asia. In D. Ball & C. G. Kwa (Eds.), Assessing Track 2 diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region: A CSCAP reader (pp. 162–178). Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University; S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Mohamed Jawhar Hassan. (2006). The Asia-Pacific Roundtable: An ASEAN-ISIS initiative to build trust and confidence. In H. Soesastro, C. Joewono, & C. G. Hernandez (Eds.), Twenty-two years of ASEAN-ISIS: Origin, evolution and challenges of Track Two diplomacy (pp. 43–51). Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Morada, N. M. (2007). APA and Track 2 diplomacy: The role of the ASEAN People's Assembly in building an ASEAN Community. In H. Katsumata & S. S. Tan (Eds.), People's ASEAN and governments' ASEAN (pp. 58–66). S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Raisian, J. (2006, January 30). On the indispensability of think tanks. Hoover Digest, (1). https://www.hoover.org/research/indispensability-think-tanks
Simon, S. W. (2010). Evaluating Track 2 approaches to security dialogue in the Asia-Pacific region: The CSCAP experience. In D. Ball & C. G. Kwa (Eds.), Assessing Track 2 diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region: A CSCAP reader (pp. 77–111). Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University; S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Soesastro, H., Joewono, C., & Hernandez, C. G. (Eds.). (2006). Twenty-two years of ASEAN-ISIS: Origin, evolution and challenges of Track Two diplomacy. Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Stone, D. (1996). Capturing the political imagination: Think tanks and the policy process. Frank Cass.
Stone, D. (2011). The ASEAN-ISIS network: Interpretive communities, informal diplomacy and discourses of region. Minerva, 49(2), 241–262. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11024-011-9171-5
Stone, D. (Ed.). (2000). Banking on knowledge: The genesis of the Global Development Network. Routledge.
Stone, D., & Nesadurai, H. E. S. (1999, December 5–8). Networks, second track diplomacy and regional cooperation: The experience of Southeast Asia think tanks (Paper presentation). Inaugural Conference on Bridging Knowledge and Policy, Bonn, Germany.
Sukma, R. (2006). ASEAN-ISIS and political-security cooperation in Asia-Pacific. In H. Soesastro, C. Joewono, & C. G. Hernandez (Eds.), Twenty two years of ASEAN-ISIS: Origin, evolution, and challenges of track two diplomacy (pp. 89–96). Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Taylor, B., & Milner, A. (2010). Track 2: Development and prospects. In D. Ball & C. G. Kwa (Eds.), Assessing Track 2 diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region: A CSCAP reader (pp. 179–190). Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University; S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
Vejjajiva, V. (1999, March 1). Dinner remarks on preventive diplomacy (Address). CSCAP Confidence and Security Building Measures Working Group & United States Institute of Peace, Bangkok, Thailand.
Wanandi, J. (2006). ASEAN-ISIS and its regional and international networking. In H. Soesastro, C. Joewono, & C. G. Hernandez (Eds.), Twenty-two years of ASEAN-ISIS: Origin, evolution and challenges of Track Two diplomacy (pp. 31–42). Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Yu, H. S. (2009). Evaluating the role of regional expert network in regional security institution building: ASEAN-ISIS and the establishment of the ARF. The Korean Journal of International Studies, 7(1), 103–125. https://doi.org/10.14731/kjis.2009.06.49.3.103
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Political Science Critique

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
All contents and information in the manuscripts published by Journal of Political Science Critique are the authors’ opinions; thus, the authors take sole responsibility for any contents. The editorial board does not agree with or accept responsibility for the manuscripts.
All published articles, information, contents, pictures, or other things in Journal of Political Science Critique are Copyright by the Journal. All Rights Reserved. All contents may not be copied or duplicated in whole or part by any means without the prior written permission of Journal of Political Science Critique.