Cold War Redux Amidst Great Power Rivalry: China and the Rise of the Global Right
Autor Victor Teoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 oct 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789819737321
ISBN-10: 981973732X
Ilustrații: X, 214 p. 10 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore
ISBN-10: 981973732X
Ilustrații: X, 214 p. 10 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore
Cuprins
Chapter 1: Cold War Redux Amidst Great Power Rivalry: The Rise of the Global Right, the Quad and China.- Chapter 2: Japan’s Resurgence as a Neoconservative State: Towards Constitutional Revisionism & Great Power Status.- Chapter 3: The United States’ Neoconservative Turn: American First and the Containment of China.- Chapter 4: The Emergence of the Conservative Right and Australia’s Relations with China and the United States.- Chapter 5: India and Global Conservative Movement.- Chapter 6: Cold War Redux The Rise of the Global Right and The Revival of the Cold War.
Notă biografică
Victor Teo is a political scientist who specializes in the International Relations of the Indo-Pacific. He was most recently The Cold War Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge’s Center for Research of Arts Social Sciences and Humanities, and was previously faculty at the University of Hong Kong.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
This book provides an introspective assessment of the conditions that have led to the bifurcated world we live in today. Utilizing a traditional Waltzian three "images” analysis, the book examines the conditions that prompted the Quad countries (US, Japan, India and Australia) to securitize their relations with their important trading partner, China over the past decade (2012-2022). Against a backdrop of rapidly growing disparities and increasingly untenable political-economic conditions at home, the last decade witnessed the emergence of a populist-styled right-wing conservative movement on a global scale. China's rapid economic ascent, coupled with its asymmetrical influence with its trading partners, intensified anxieties as China closed the gap in capabilities with the United States, further exacerbating international insecurities. Paradoxically, this situation has arisen due to China's remarkable success in becoming a de facto (rather than de jure) member of the San Francisco system in the second half of the Cold War through a very successful adaptation of capitalist reforms. The adjustments brought about by the Quad countries are in reality realpolitik manoeuvres dressed in Cold War rhetoric in a collective effort to isolate China and diminish its influence within the San Francisco system and the wider region. Unless the Quad countries can recalibrate their relations and adapt to a significantly more influential China, the region's insecurities are likely to intensify as the conditions fueling nationalisms persist and globalization becomes increasingly bifurcated, leading to a possible collapse of the San Francisco system itself. This book takes a no-holds barred approach in challenging conventional wisdoms and policy-centric narratives, and puts forth a forwarding-looking argument that community building, development and peace should remain the dominant goals for all regional countries going forward.
Victor Teo is a political scientist who specializes in the International Relations of the Indo-Pacific. He was most recently The Cold War Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge’s Center for Research of Arts Social Sciences and Humanities, and was previously faculty at the University of Hong Kong.
Victor Teo is a political scientist who specializes in the International Relations of the Indo-Pacific. He was most recently The Cold War Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge’s Center for Research of Arts Social Sciences and Humanities, and was previously faculty at the University of Hong Kong.
Caracteristici
Provide a balanced analysis rather than an advocation of the national position of a particular country’s policies Argues the welfare and needs of Asia should prevail beyond narrow parochial narratives of national interests defined by national security communities in the West Offers a sanguine but realistic appraisal of the development of US-China relations from an Asian perspective in the challenging times