Orchestration: China's Economic Statecraft Across Asia and Europe
Autor James Reillyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 mar 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197526347
ISBN-10: 0197526349
Pagini: 284
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197526349
Pagini: 284
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Reilly's book on China's positive economic statecraft is an important contribution for students, scholars and policymakers interested in studying governance, foreign economic policy and institutions.
Further research could extend Reilly's useful framework to new frontiers where sovereignty is weak, contested or non-existent, like sea, space and cyber.
This analysis of Chinese economic statecraft and its shortcomings offers crucial insight into China's effectiveness as a global player. Highly recommended.
This is an excellent book about an important topic: China's current economic statecraft, which now represents China's most important foreign policy tool.
A central question associated with China's rise is how it will use its economic resources for political ends. With detailed case studies and an engaging narrative, Reilly offers a superb account of how China practices economic statecraft. A must-read for anyone interested in China's influence in the world today.
Very few books achieve at this scale. Relying on years of extensive field research across Asia, Europe, and China — including remarkable work done in North Korea and Myanmar — James Reilly employs rich detail to insightfully reveal the whys and hows of China's single-most important instrument of power: its economic statecraft. He finds Beijing effective in orchestrating economic statecraft, but then shows us why it often fails to advance the strategic goals that policy aims to achieve.
A timely contribution to our understanding of China's role in a global economic order that faces new challenges in the mid-21st century. Reilly draws on social science theory, history, and an impressive set of cases illuminated by first-hand experiences across East Asia and Europe to present a nuanced view of China's effort to harness its new economic might to the regime's foreign policy goals. In contrast with images of a monolithic Chinese leadership commanding a threatening juggernaut, Reilly depicts the challenges Beijing has faced, including the difficulty of coordinating an array of domestic actors who are involved in formulating and implementing international economic policy. These challenges have shaped China's distinctive approach to economic statecraft — orchestration — with mixed results that Reilly carefully documents.
Reilly has written a theoretically tight and empirically rigorous analysis of China's foreign economic policies. His social science training and area knowledge lead him to complex findings: First, there is variation in the success of the Chinese Communist Party's foreign economic policies. Second, this variation depends in large measure on whether the Party can find, and then coordinate with, sub-state economic actors with independent but overlapping interests, in the face of variations in state practice in target states. Third, the reality of China's foreign economic practices is quite distant from the U.S. policy makers' unsophisticated stereotype of a monolithic Party-State dictating exploitative outcomes around the world.
Further research could extend Reilly's useful framework to new frontiers where sovereignty is weak, contested or non-existent, like sea, space and cyber.
This analysis of Chinese economic statecraft and its shortcomings offers crucial insight into China's effectiveness as a global player. Highly recommended.
This is an excellent book about an important topic: China's current economic statecraft, which now represents China's most important foreign policy tool.
A central question associated with China's rise is how it will use its economic resources for political ends. With detailed case studies and an engaging narrative, Reilly offers a superb account of how China practices economic statecraft. A must-read for anyone interested in China's influence in the world today.
Very few books achieve at this scale. Relying on years of extensive field research across Asia, Europe, and China — including remarkable work done in North Korea and Myanmar — James Reilly employs rich detail to insightfully reveal the whys and hows of China's single-most important instrument of power: its economic statecraft. He finds Beijing effective in orchestrating economic statecraft, but then shows us why it often fails to advance the strategic goals that policy aims to achieve.
A timely contribution to our understanding of China's role in a global economic order that faces new challenges in the mid-21st century. Reilly draws on social science theory, history, and an impressive set of cases illuminated by first-hand experiences across East Asia and Europe to present a nuanced view of China's effort to harness its new economic might to the regime's foreign policy goals. In contrast with images of a monolithic Chinese leadership commanding a threatening juggernaut, Reilly depicts the challenges Beijing has faced, including the difficulty of coordinating an array of domestic actors who are involved in formulating and implementing international economic policy. These challenges have shaped China's distinctive approach to economic statecraft — orchestration — with mixed results that Reilly carefully documents.
Reilly has written a theoretically tight and empirically rigorous analysis of China's foreign economic policies. His social science training and area knowledge lead him to complex findings: First, there is variation in the success of the Chinese Communist Party's foreign economic policies. Second, this variation depends in large measure on whether the Party can find, and then coordinate with, sub-state economic actors with independent but overlapping interests, in the face of variations in state practice in target states. Third, the reality of China's foreign economic practices is quite distant from the U.S. policy makers' unsophisticated stereotype of a monolithic Party-State dictating exploitative outcomes around the world.
Notă biografică
James Reilly is an Associate Professor in the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney. He has been a Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy, and a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Oxford. He also served as the East Asia Representative of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) in China from 2001-2008. His articles have appeared in numerous edited volumes and academic journals, and he is the author of Strong Society, Smart State: The Rise of Public Opinion in China's Japan Policy, and the co-editor of Australia and China at 40.