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China-Russia Relations in Central Asia: Energy Policy, Beijing’s New Assertiveness and 21st Century Geopolitics

Autor Thomas Stephan Eder
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 aug 2013
​As China rises to global power status, its relations with other major powers, including Russia, are constantly renegotiated. Energy figures prominently in both countries’ foreign policy. An extensive analysis of Chinese language sources – academic debate 1997-2012 – confirms a collision of interests over Central Asian reserves. While unanimous appeals to compromise render previous predictions of impending confrontation unconvincing, descriptions of Sino-Central Asian energy relations as “central to energy security”, and the explicit rejection of a Russian “sphere of influence”, also exclude a retreat. In the long term, China will likely replace Russia as the dominant force in Central Asia’s energy sector, causing the Kremlin to perceive another “encroachment”. The current notion of a “strategic partnership” will inevitably be challenged.​
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783658032715
ISBN-10: 3658032715
Pagini: 152
Ilustrații: XII, 139 p.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.21 kg
Ediția:2014
Editura: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden
Colecția Springer VS
Locul publicării:Wiesbaden, Germany

Public țintă

Research

Cuprins

​​ ​Historico-Political Contextualization.- Sino-Russian Energy Relations 1991-2011.- Neoclassical Realist-Perception Theory Model of Analysis.- Chinese Academic Discourse 1997-2012​.

Notă biografică

Thomas Stephan Eder, LLB LLM BA MA is Research Assistant at the Hong Kong University Law School and PhD Candidate in International Law at the University of Vienna Law School, Austria.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

As China rises to global power status, its relations with other major powers, including Russia, are constantly renegotiated. Energy figures prominently in both countries’ foreign policy. An extensive analysis of Chinese language sources – academic debate 1997-2012 – confirms a collision of interests over Central Asian reserves. While unanimous appeals to compromise render previous predictions of impending confrontation unconvincing, descriptions of Sino-Central Asian energy relations as “central to energy security”, and the explicit rejection of a Russian “sphere of influence”, also exclude a retreat. In the long term, China will likely replace Russia as the dominant force in Central Asia’s energy sector, causing the Kremlin to perceive another “encroachment”. The current notion of a “strategic partnership” will inevitably be challenged.
 
 
Contents
·         Historico-Political Contextualization
·         Sino-Russian Energy Relations 1991-2011
·         Neoclassical Realist-Perception Theory Model of Analysis
·         Chinese Academic Discourse 1997-2012
 
 
Target Groups
·         Researchers in the fields of international relations, political science, and area studies (China, Russia, Central Asia) ·         Practitioners in the fields of international relations, foreign, energy and security policy
 
 
The Author
Thomas Stephan Eder, LLB LLM BA MA is Research Assistant at the Hong Kong University Law School and PhD Candidate in International Law at the University of Vienna Law School, Austria.

Caracteristici

Publication in the field of social sciences? Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras