Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | Central Library General Section | 327.51073 FOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 026343 |
327.51058 PAN China's Eurasian pivot : | 327.51058 PAN China's eurasian pivot: | 327.51059 ODG Maritime Security between China and Southeast Asia | 327.51073 FOO China, the United States, and global order / | 327.51073 PAG Living with the dragon : | 327.5109 YAN Pacific Islands in China`s Grand Strategy : | 327.5150 LAM Changes on the roof of the world: |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [303]-327) and index.
"Two experts in the field of international relations and the East Asian region explore the global implications of the relationship between the United States and China"-- Provided by publisher.
"The United States and China are the two most important states in the international system and are crucial to the evolution of global order. Both recognize each other as vital players in a range of issues of global significance, including the use of force, macroeconomic policy, nonproliferation of nuclear weapons, climate change, and financial regulation. In this book, Rosemary Foot and Andrew Walter, both experts in the fields of international relations and the East Asian region, explore the relationship of the two countries to these global order issues since 1945. They ask whether the behaviour of each country is consistent with global order norms, and which domestic and international factors shape this behaviour. They investigate how the bilateral relationship of the United States and China influences the stances that each country takes. They also assess the global implications of national decisions, coming to the sobering conclusion that China and the United States tend to constrain rather than encourage more cooperative solutions to key global challenges. This is a sophisticated analysis that adroitly engages the historical, theoretical, and policy literature"-- Provided by publisher.
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction: norms and global order; 2. Use of force; 3. Macroeconomic policy; 4. Non-proliferation of nuclear weapons; 5. Climate change; 6. Financial regulation; 7. Conclusion: behavioral consistency and its implication for global order.
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