@techreport{oai:ir.ide.go.jp:00037771, author = {Aoki-Okabe, Maki}, month = {Mar}, note = {application/pdf, IDP000405_001, Thai foreign policy in the 1990s has been said to be contingent on the government in power, which changes between (or within) these groups and vacillates between pro-democratic reformists/principle-pursuers and the conservatives/profit-seekers. In these studies, Thailand’s Indochinese policy has often been referred to as a typical consequence of politics between the pragmatists and the reformists. However, whether or not domestic oppositional politics is the key determinant of foreign policy in the post-Cold War era still requires further examination, precisely because the model is now facing serious challenges between theory and reality. In this paper, I review the existing arguments concerning Thailand’s foreign policy in the post-Cold War Era and point out their limitations and questions for future study.}, title = {Research review : searching for a new framework for Thailand's foreign policy in the post-cold war era}, year = {2013} }