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Tag: China

Roundtable 9-20 on Constructing National Security: U.S. Relations with India and China

July 24, 2017July 22, 2017 By George Lawson, David James Gill, Seo-Hyun Park, Ole Wæver, Jarrod Hayes

“Identity matters for security outcomes”, writes Jarrod Hayes in this fascinating roundtable on his 2013 book, Constructing National Security. Is there anyone working on international security today who can possibly think otherwise? Even the most diehard rationalist must surely recognize the importance of identity to President Donald Trump’s worldview, and to how other states, whether…

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Policy Roundtable 1-9 on U.S.-China Relations and the Trump Administration

May 13, 2017January 22, 2021 By Joshua Rovner, Dingding Chen, M. Taylor Fravel, Mira Rapp-Hooper, Joseph M. Siracusa, Toshi Yoshihara, Zhu Feng

Nearly twenty years ago, Robert Ross wrote an influential article on the sources of stability in East Asia. He argued that while the United States and China were destined to engage in great-power competition, geography and structural factors would lead to a stable regional bipolar balance. The United States would focus on maintaining its maritime…

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Roundtable 9-12 on Return to Cold War

March 3, 2017March 4, 2017 By Kimberly Marten, James M. Goldgeier, Rajan Menon, Condoleezza Rice, Angela Stent, Robert Legvold

As President Donald Trump’s administration begins, relations between the United States and Russia make the headlines almost every day. No one seems able to agree on what Russian President Vladimir Putin did or did not do to try to influence the 2016 U.S. elections, much less on what his ultimate aims are. Trump’s own cabinet…

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Policy Series: The Waning of the Post-War Order

February 21, 2017September 4, 2017 By T.G. Otte

Making sense of the present is a difficult undertaking at the best of times. It seems more especially so at the current moment. The tumult of 2016 was of a kind not seen since the ‘spring of the peoples’ in 1848. Power no longer seems to be what it was and where it was thought…

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Article Review 67 on “Wither the Balancers? The Case for a Methodological Reset” and on “States, Nations, and Territorial Stability: Why Chinese Hegemony Would Be Better for International Order.”

January 19, 2017February 1, 2017 By Ja Ian Chong

Adam Liff’s “Whither the Balancers? The Case for a Methodological Reset” and Ryan Griffith’s “States, Nations, and Territorial Stability: Why Chinese Hegemony Would Be Better for International Order” seek to re-examine several foundational concepts in international relations scholarship. Liff argues for a more conceptually rigorous and standardized specification of balancing that sufficiently accounts for contemporary…

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Article Review 65 on “Where Does Canada Fit in the US-China Strategic Competition across the Pacific?”

January 6, 2017September 14, 2020 By David Dewitt

Tsuyoshi Kawasaki’s article contributes to a modest literature on Canada’s diplomatic, security, and defence relations with the Asia Pacific countries. It provides the reader with a succinct and useful review of emergent China in the larger international community with particular reference to U.S.-China relations.  Derivatively, Kawasaki explores his thesis concerning its implications for Canada.

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Roundtable 9-4 on The China Challenge: Shaping the Choices of a Rising Power

October 30, 2016July 5, 2017 By James McAllister, Avery Goldstein, Xiaoyu Pu, Thomas Christensen

Few political scientists enjoy a level of respect within the discipline comparable to that of Thomas Christensen. His work is always theoretically informed, but also open to the insights of a variety of paradigms and approaches rather than being the captive of a single school of thought. Both of his previous books on alliance politics…

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Roundtable 9-1 on Chinese Hegemony: Grand Strategy and International Institutions in East Asian History

September 19, 2016February 1, 2017 By Victoria Tin-bor Hui, Ja Ian Chong, James Holmes, Yongjin Zhang, Feng Zhang

It is a pleasure to read Feng Zhang’s Chinese Hegemony: Grand Strategy and International Institutions in East Asian History. This book is an exemplar in its serious treatment of Chinese history, its holistic approach to East Asian history covering Inner Asia as well as Korea and Japan, its simultaneous analysis of the foreign policy strategies…

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Roundtable 8-3 on Theory of Unipolar Politics

October 12, 2015June 30, 2018 By H-Diplo

How long will the United States remain the world’s sole superpower, uniquely capable of commanding the commons and projecting sustained military power to overseas regions? Why has the United States been so prone to use military force in the years since the Soviet Union collapsed? And how might answers to these questions hinge on strategic…

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Roundtable 8-1 on Looking for Balance: China, the United States, and Power Balancing in East Asia

September 14, 2015September 14, 2020 By H-Diplo

Will Asia be the site of the next major global conflict or will Asia’s future continue to be characterized by peace and stability? This question has invited a veritable multitude of arguments and counterarguments during the last two decades as scholars have tried to assess the implications of growing Chinese power for the international system….

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