In this book, the authors highlight the influence of China in the region of East Asia and the significance of subregions within it, particularly the subregion formed, or imagined, by Taiwan, Hong Kong, and their links with south China. In Part I, they analyse development by reference to the neo-governance of globalization and regionalization as well as the interplay of cultural and ethical values within East Asia. In Part II, they turn to the dynamics of subregional development and the role of China. The picture which emerges is complex and graphic, nuanced and intricate. East Asia is a focal point for the contestation of forces framed by globalization, regionalization, subregionalization, state, and cultural values - a changing morphology in which openness is associated with export-led growth and economic integration. It is a region in which change is at once welcomed and distrusted, a region where states are not merely powerful but authoritarian, one in which business is assumed to lead politics, and where old rivalries are typically transcended by desires to create new economic opportunities.