China's strategic priorities

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Bibliographic Information

China's strategic priorities

edited by Jonathan H. Ping and Brett McCormick

(RoutledgeCurzon contemporary China series, [138])

Routledge, 2016

  • : hbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The People's Republic of China is the world's most populous state and largest consumer of energy, having demonstrated momentous progress on an unprecedented scale. This global power has increasingly shaped international relations as a result of its population size, economic development and political character. Identifying the most significant new issues and problems that have arisen from China's rapid development, this book examines the evolution of China's contemporary foreign policy and international relations. In doing so, it underlines the global importance of China's management of its own politics and economics, and demonstrates how all nation-states have a vested interest in -and to varying degrees are liable for -the consequences of Chinese actions. The book aims to spark debate by drawing attention to these critical issues; placing them on the scholarly agenda as well as that of the practitioner. It provides factual evidence, progressive findings, justification and a rationale for action, expert analysis, and the resulting policy prescriptions. In addition, the book highlights the liable costs of failing to address China's strategic priorities. This interdisciplinary book draws attention to the most pressing issues that China must address for universal benefit, and will be of great interest to students and scholars of International Relations, Chinese Studies and Political Science.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Studying China and Strategic Priorities 1. Myth-busting: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Chinese Strategic Culture 2. Western River Civilization and the Logic of China's Strategic Behavior 3. Analyzing China's Foreign Policy: Domestic Politics, Public Opinion And Leaders 4. Crises as Impetus for Institutionalization: Maritime Crisis Management Mechanisms in China's Near Seas 5. The United States of America factor in China's dispute with Japan over the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands: Balancing Washington's 'rebalancing' in East Asian waters 6. China's Relations with India: Great Power Statecraft and Territory 7. United States-China Cooperation: The Role of Pakistan after the Death of Osama Bin Laden 8.Chinese Regionalism: Balancing and Constraint in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Conclusion

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