@article{oai:kobe-c.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001915, author = {泉川, 泰博 and IZUMIKAWA, Yasuhiro}, issue = {2}, journal = {神戸女学院大学論集, KOBE COLLEGE STUDIES}, month = {Jan}, note = {P(論文), What will be the future security framework in East Asia? Will a multilateral security system similar to what we see in today's Europe emerge in East Asia? Or will the so-called hub-spoke system, with the United States as the center of bilateral relations with East Asian states, remain the dominantfeature of East Asian security? This article purports to address these questions from the perspective of international Relations Theory and to predict what may be a future East Asian security. First, the article reviews how three main approaches in IR Theory explain the prospect of East Asian security community, and points out that the significant obstacles exist that hinder its emergence in a near future. On the other hand , the article argues, it is also unlikely that the current security system, in which the United States maintains closer bilateral relations with East Asian states than states in the region do among themselves, will remain unaltered. Then, it is pointed out that the most likely scenario of a future East Asian security framework is what may be similar to the so-colled Concert of Europe, which prevailed in the post-Napoleonic Europe. The article ends with the first-cut description of the emerging and more complex web of bilateral interactions in East Asia, particularly around the Korean Peninsula, empirically.}, pages = {107--115}, title = {「東アジアのコンサート」化現象と朝鮮半島周辺の国際関係}, volume = {55}, year = {2009}, yomi = {イズミカワ, ヤスヒロ} }