19 results on '"Chong, Alan"'
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2. Cultivating Disciplinary Expectations for Engineering Education Research in Canada.
- Author
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Burke, Lydia E Carol-Ann, Chong, Alan, Evans, Greg J., and Romkey, Lisa
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ENGINEERING education , *EDUCATION research , *INQUIRY method (Teaching) , *SOCIAL values , *SUSTAINABLE engineering , *SCIENTIFIC community - Abstract
Engineering education research in Canada is, in many ways, still establishing itself as a discipline, yet much is already being asked of it. The diversity of career pathways for engineering graduates, along with the increased complexity of global engineering challenges and the ramifications of technological opportunities, is raising important questions about current engineering education foci and practices. This paper brings together issues surfaced through the process of compiling a Special Theme on engineering education research in Canada, positioning the collection of papers in terms of the challenges and opportunities faced by this maturing Canadian research community. We seek to reconcile how this research can incorporate the theoretical and methodological depth valued in the social sciences while honoring the focus on effective instructional practices that has become an important strand of inquiry in engineering education. Challenges to the growth of engineering education research, such as funding and graduate student inclusion, are also discussed. In addition, we explore the emergence of teaching stream engineering faculty and problematize the role of research and scholarship in their career trajectories. Finally, we call for more strategic thinking to guide the evolution of engineering education research in Canada. We hope that, collectively, this editorial and the other four papers in this Special Theme will help to stimulate discussion about how we define and recognize excellence in the domain of engineering education research in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. The unbearable lightness of legalism: the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL law , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The application of law in South East Asia frustrates many scholars due to its subliminal character. I call this subliminal form of law 'legalism'. This article adopts the method of historical sociology to trace three evolutionary phases in South East Asia's international history of legalism to illuminate the cumulative mixture of informality beneath formality in the practice of legalism via 'social morality'. In pre-colonial times, divinely-guided moral censure and the ethical reputation of particular rulers passed for proto-intersocietal law. In colonial times, international law was foisted by Western powers onto the informal social morality of the region, resulting in power politics operating behind legal manoeuvres. The advent of ASEAN saw a reversion to a preference for even greater informality and soft law. Finally, the post-colonial era witnessed experimentation with Westphalian international law. This has resulted nowadays in a cumulative halfway house of soft legalism operated through diplomatic social morality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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4. Developmental Railpolitics: The Political Economy of China's High-Speed Rail Projects in Thailand and Indonesia.
- Author
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WU, Shang-Su and Chong, Alan
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HIGH speed trains , *MILITARY modernization (Equipment) , *BOUNDARY disputes , *INVESTMENTS , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Developmental railpolitics advances Chinese geostrategic ambitions without the overt opprobrium commonly generated by such issues as China's militarization of the South China Sea, military modernization, border conflicts and trade disputes. This article examines the implications of planned Chinese high-speed rail (HSR) investments in Thailand and Indonesia. The HSR project in Thailand represents an important advance in China's geopolitical influence through the larger design of the Singapore–Kunming Rail Link (SKRL), while the one in Indonesia is aimed at forging better economic ties with the largest country in Southeast Asia. It also assesses the room for political manoeuvre by those two countries vis-à-vis China's developmental railpolitics. Thailand considers the Chinese HSR project as only its first step to [End Page 503] achieve its ambitious goal of becoming a land transportation hub in Indochina. Moreover, the Kingdom is still practising a strategy of balancing foreign powers. The HSR project in Indonesia also reflects changing political considerations on contracting foreign partners to build infrastructure. The conclusions suggest that China can be outmanoeuvred in railway bargaining by the recipient states, depending on geopolitical positioning and the nature of their domestic political and economic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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5. The international politics of air disasters: lessons for aviation disaster governance from Asia, 2014-2015.
- Author
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Chong, Alan and Chang, Jun Yan
- Subjects
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AIRCRAFT accidents , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *DIPLOMACY - Abstract
Through a qualitative analysis of three air disasters from Asia in recent years—MH370, MH17 and QZ8501—this article investigates the puzzle of how aviation disasters open up a sovereign state's domestic governance and foreign policy to international questioning within an anarchic international system. This enquiry thereby highlights the gaps in the global governance of aviation, particularly in the areas of safety and recovery in the wake of aviation disasters. Three linked literatures demonstrate this dynamic. First, aligned with the 'emotional turn' in international relations, we show that the portrayal of air disasters and grieving next of kin in global media highlights the politics of grief and trauma. Second, aviation disasters surface the politics of disaster diplomacy in the guise of 'security competition by proxy' in the recovery process. Third, we emphasize that these shortfalls in domestic governance and international cooperation demonstrated by the attention-grabbing spectacle of aviation disasters consequently underscore important knowledge, norms and compliance gaps in global aviation governance. Aviation disasters and their aftermath thus shine an international spotlight on the state's domestic governance and foreign policies in these three manners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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6. Civilisations and harm: the politics of civilising processes between the West and the non-West.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
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CRITICAL theory , *HISTORICAL sociology , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Andrew Linklater’s Violence and Civilization in the Western States-System is to be both praised and critiqued for opening spaces for discussing civilisational standards in the era of a globalising world. It offers a healthy provocation for inquiry into how non-Western states ought to comprehend the legacies of Western political evolution colouring existing ‘IR’ as a discipline. Linklater’s book inspires three thematic reactions: globalisation does bring harm; the notion of a universal civilisation remains open to debate; and the possibilities of civilising patterns in premodern Southeast Asia serving as supplementary mirrors and extensions of the relationship between violence and civilisation. It is suggested that Linklater’s sequel must consider the trajectory of non-Western sociologies of IR. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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7. Militarizing civilians in Singapore: preparing for ‘Crisis’ within a calibrated nationalism.
- Author
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Chong, Alan and Chan, Samuel
- Subjects
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POLITICAL systems , *NATIONAL security , *NATIONALISM , *MILITARISM , *HISTORY ,SINGAPOREAN politics & government - Abstract
The Singaporean polity has created the ‘militarized civilian’. This policy phenomenon beckons the question: How is this cross-fertilization carried out in Singapore's civil–military relations? Militarization is in the first sense meant to inculcate a calibrated dual personality within the civilian whereby being an effective soldier requires indulging in simulated military suffering as a badge of pride; at the same time, the citizen soldier has to believe that military and civilian values are perfectly interchangeable and contribute equally to the maintenance of peace. In a second sense, militarization is equally about permanently ritualizing sacrifices for a communitarian defence. We argue that while mostly successful, militarization also produces the tension arising from the need to appear pugnaciously vigilant while avoiding the casualties that must logically arise from heightened simulated combat. This tension is explained through two dimensions of ongoing crises: the parameters of a politically dramatized National Service ritual; and the constant propaganda of geopolitical dangers threatening the Republic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Intellectual iconoclasm as modernizing foreign policy: the cases of Mahathir bin Mohamad and Lee Kuan Yew.
- Author
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Chong, Alan and Balakrishnan, K. S.
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MODERNIZATION (Social science) , *NATIONALISM ,SOUTHEAST Asian politics & government - Abstract
This article attempts to engage in a preliminary twinned study of the foreign policy styles of Mahathir bin Mohamad and Lee Kuan Yew within the framework of ‘modernizing Southeast Asian foreign policies’. Modernization is a process of immense multidimensional displacement in economy, society, political system, attitudes towards politicians, identities, work, and consumption. As such the onus falls upon their leaders to either mitigate change or productively awaken their followers to embrace a new mode of thought. Both Lee and Mahathir have however chosen to engage in the foreign policy of intellectual iconoclasm featuring the narrative of ‘productive shock’, manufactured nationalist logics, elitist policy-making and elaborate self-propaganda. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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9. Smart Power and Military Force: An Introduction.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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SOFT power (Social sciences) , *DIPLOMACY , *ARMED Forces , *HUMANITARIAN assistance - Abstract
Smart power is comprised of two elements: the quest for building society among states and between states and non-state actors; as well as the desire for cleaner forms of power projection. This special issue explores how states continue to fumble over achieving the optimum mix of hard and soft power across several country cases and themed articles. This set of contributions suggests that smart power is not unlike a ‘Swiss Army Knife’ analogy: multifunctional and challenging to choose the right combination of ideational and material tools. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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10. Political leadership in Singapore: Transitional reflections amidst the politics of bifurcation.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
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MUNICIPAL services ,SINGAPOREAN politics & government ,HISTORY of Singapore - Abstract
A review of several articles, which includes "The ruling elite of Singapore: Networks of power and influence" by Michael D. Barr, "Goh Keng Swee: A legacy of public service" by Emrys Chew, and Chong Guan Kwa, and "We also served: Reflections of Singapore's former PAP MPs" by Chiang Hai Ding and Rohan Kamis.
- Published
- 2015
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11. Information Warfare?: The Case for an Asian Perspective on Information Operations.
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Chong, Alan
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INFORMATION warfare , *HISTORY of military art & science , *NETWORK-centric operations (Military science) , *MILITARY intelligence , *MILITARY policy - Abstract
While information warfare (IW) has been treated by its foremost western proponents as a strategic revolution, the reasons for such a claim are actually rather weak if one considers how non-western approaches to the informational components of warfare have put forth their positions within a multidimensional context of strategy. This article ventures an Asian perspective that can potentially offer a more nuanced contribution to the study of IW. This article will pan out by first critically analyzing the predominantly American interpretation of IW as a set of five characteristics that can be contrasted to an Asian rival. Subsequently, we will elaborate a list of features likely to characterize a generic Asian IW approach, which I will argue, is more appropriately termed information operations (IO). These Asian IO features will be teased out through a reading of Sun Tzu, Mao Zedong, and Vo Nguyen Giap. An Asian IO approach will not distinguish wartime and peacetime applications, and neither will it place a premium on liberal democratic ideology as a basis for information superiority. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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12. Waging “Small Wars” in the New Millennium: Chameleonic Missions and Virtual Aggression—An Introduction.
- Author
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Weichong, Ong and Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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LOW-intensity conflicts (Military science) , *INSURGENCY , *INTERVENTION (International law) , *POLITICAL stability , *WAR & civilization - Abstract
“Small wars” have returned to the international political agenda in the early twentieth century with almost a vengeance. Leaving aside the factors of social media and satellite television today, the nature of small wars has adhered to its politicized, xenophobic, and asymmetrical characteristics. The latter were predicted by British and American military manuals produced in the early to middle twentieth century. This special issue aims to revisit the nature of small wars in the era of great power interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya in the 2000s. It will be apparent that two further characteristics need to be appended to small wars: chameleonic missions and virtual aggression. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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13. Premodern Southeast Asia as a Guide to International Relations between Peoples: Prowess and Prestige in “Intersocietal Relations” in the Sejarah Melayu.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Contemporary research on the international relations of Southeast Asia has neglected the latent possibilities of reading non-western indigenous forms of international relations as a contribution to worldwide debates on the nature of international politics. Drawing on one precolonial account of Southeast Asian political practices in the Malay Archipelago, the Sejarah Melayu, this article proposes that Southeast Asians have previously philosophized about “intersocietal relations” in ways that privilege noble prowess, knowledge quests, and hierarchical justice through the interdependence of trade and culture within the region, and with India, China, and the Arab world. These features can still speak to contemporary relations between peoples rather than states and to security issues within borderless regions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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14. A Universal Sacred Mission and the Universal Secular Organization: The Holy See and the United Nations.
- Author
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Chong, Alan and Troy, Jodok
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HUMAN rights & religion , *INTERNATIONALISM , *INTERNATIONAL law , *CATHOLIC Church & politics , *RELIGION , *HISTORY - Abstract
Today, the Holy See has formal diplomatic relations with almost all states around the globe as well as with the United Nations (UN), where it holds the curious position of a Permanent Observer. Representing a universal sacred mission, the Holy See views the UN as one of the most important avenues in international relations for pursuing its aims. Vatican diplomats have thus been at the forefront of lobbying for human dignity at the UN in various conferences and popes have even directly addressed the UN's General Assembly. In examining relations between the Holy See and the UN, at least two issues are obvious and of primary importance. First, both institutions share a universal approach – the latter to represent all states of the world and the Holy See to represent all Catholics. Furthermore, both preach to their constituencies that they represent a universal idealist mission – to pursue peace and work towards the universalization of human rights. Second, the Holy See enjoys a Permanent Observer status within the UN and also a seemingly privileged status among all other religious communities. By adopting short studies of the Holy See's interventions in three dimensions of human rights advocacy at the UN, along with its supplement of the UN's mission in correcting capitalist development, the article concludes that the Catholic religion has returned in a role that reaffirms the possibilities of enhancing society on a globalist scale rather than merely reinforcing an international society of sovereign states. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2011
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15. Small state soft power strategies: virtual enlargement in the cases of the Vatican City State and Singapore.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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SMALL states , *STATE power , *INTERNATIONAL relations -- Psychological aspects , *DIPLOMACY , *ECONOMICS & psychology , *INTERNATIONAL relations theory - Abstract
The concept of soft power, or symbolic power, offers unexplored potential for analysing small state power. This article argues that it is a means of virtual enlargement of small states' foreign policy reach and presence. If one examines the bases of soft power, it becomes evident that small states can utilize their political economy potential, models of good governance and diplomatic mediation as forms of power that defy their territorial limitations. Case studies of the Vatican City State and Singapore illustrate 'small state soft power'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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16. Asian Contributions on Democratic Dignity and Responsibility: Rizal, Sukarno and Lee on Guided Democracy.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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DEMOCRACY , *NATIONALISM , *POLITICAL doctrines , *POLITICAL attitudes ,ASIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
Democracy as political doctrine has its fair share of controversies over the adjudication of rights and the prioritization of the individual over the community. These debates have largely derived from its western genesis. The current stage of global development has however supplied many non-western perspectives on democracy which suggest that any consensus over an identifiable body of democratic thought is likely to witness more sub-diversity than ever before. This article argues that contemporary Asian thinkers on the philosophy of government have a valuable contribution to make to democratic discourse notwithstanding the clichés of the Asian Values debate of the 1990s. By performing a sampled reading of José Rizal, Sukarno and Lee Kuan Yew on their diverse interpretations of guided democracy in a nationalistic context, it will be shown that these three modern Southeast Asian political thinkers would offer some tentative Asian insights on the democracy of dignity and of responsibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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17. Singaporean foreign policy and the Asian Values Debate, 1992-2000: reflections on an experiment in soft power.
- Author
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Chong, Alan
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL relations , *HUMAN rights , *COLD War, 1945-1991 ,FOREIGN relations of the United States - Abstract
Between 1992 and 2000, the international order witnessed a clash of discourses not seen since the height of the Cold War when both superpowers engaged in propaganda offensives to assert the superiority of their respective governing ideologies. However, unlike the Cold War, the Asian Values Debate did not involve a supporting cast of armed occupations, insurgencies and the preaching of revolution. It involved instead statements of difference couched in intellectual and material terms, and also relied heavily on persuasion by words and symbolic deeds. This article seeks to evaluate Singaporean foreign policy in the Asian Values Debate by using the concept of soft power as described by Joseph Nye. However, soft power, as the ability to obtain foreign policy ends through attraction or convincing rather than through coercion, is itself vulnerable to instances where the ideas propounded diverge from the practices they purport to inspire. Singapore's role in the Debate will be examined through three events at its zenith between 1992 and 2000: the clash between Asia and the West at the 1993 United Nations World Conference on Human Rights at Vienna, the Michael Fay Caning Affair which directly pitted Singapore against the US in 1994, and the fate of the Asian exceptionalist argument in the face of the 1997-99 Asian Financial Crisis. The conclusion suggests that Singaporean foreign policy's experiment in soft power has had its successes, but it remains qualified in its applicability to other Asian foreign policies by certain limits inherent in the Singaporean discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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18. Introduction: the foreign policy power of small states.
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Chong, Alan and Maass, Matthias
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SMALL states , *DIPLOMACY , *POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
An introduction is presented for this issue which includes articles about small states' foreign policy, diplomacy, and power.
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- 2010
- Full Text
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19. Special Issue on BIT CMOS Built-In Test Architecture for High-Speed Jitter Measurement.
- Author
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Taylor, Karen A., Nelson, Bryan, Chong, Alan, Lin, Henry, Chan, Eddie, Soma, Mani, Haggag, Hosam, Huard, Jeff, and Braatz, Jim
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COMPLEMENTARY metal oxide semiconductors , *ANALOG-to-digital converters , *ELECTRIC inverters , *ANALOG electronic systems , *DIGITAL electronics , *ELECTRIC current converters - Abstract
Timing measurements for gigahertz clock frequencies require high accuracy and resolution. This paper proposes a scalable built-in self-test (BIST) method that measures accumulated period jitter over a programmable number of periods, without using another reference clock. This on-chip method uses a charge pump to convert time to a voltage, which is digitized by an all-digital flash analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The ADC employs multiple chains of inverter strings composed of three series inverters instead of the popular analog comparators. The inverter thresholds set the reference voltages for triggering given an input dc value. The output is calibrated and converted to jitter measurement. The design using a 0.25 μm BiCMOS process, with an input range of 625 MHz-1GHz, shows that a resolution of 70 ps root mean square (tins) jitter can be achieved, while occupying 0.0575 mm² area with a very conservative layout style. The design has been fabricated and tested, and the test results are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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