Multilateralism in Peril
The Uneasy Triangle of the US, China and the EU
Herausgeber: Gaenssmantel, Frank; Wu, Chien-Huei; Giumelli, Francesco
Multilateralism in Peril
The Uneasy Triangle of the US, China and the EU
Herausgeber: Gaenssmantel, Frank; Wu, Chien-Huei; Giumelli, Francesco
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This collaborative work brings together international lawyers and political scientists to explore whether and how the retreat of the US, and the simultaneous rise of China, affect the dynamics of multilateralism to which the EU claims to adhere.
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This collaborative work brings together international lawyers and political scientists to explore whether and how the retreat of the US, and the simultaneous rise of China, affect the dynamics of multilateralism to which the EU claims to adhere.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 298
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Mai 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 456g
- ISBN-13: 9780367765231
- ISBN-10: 0367765233
- Artikelnr.: 70352832
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 298
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Mai 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 456g
- ISBN-13: 9780367765231
- ISBN-10: 0367765233
- Artikelnr.: 70352832
Chien-Huei Wu is a Research Professor, Institute of European and American Studies (IEAS), Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan. He received his PhD in Laws in European University Institute in Florence in 2009. He now coordinates of US-Taiwan-China research group in the IEAS and his research interests cover EU external relations, US-China economic competition, and international economic law. He has been a visiting fellow at Georgetown University, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. and Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public and International Law, Heidelberg. He recently published Law and Politics on Export Restrictions: WTO and Beyond (CUP 2021). He spoke before the European Parliament on the future of EU-Taiwan trade relations in 2019. Frank Gaenssmantel is Assistant Professor at the Department of International Relations and International Organisation at the University of Groningen since 2010. He previously held a position as Research Fellow at the Centre for Advanced Studies on Contemporary China (Centro di Alti Studi sulla Cina Contemporanea, CASCC) in Turin and taught at the School of Advanced International and Area Studies at East China Normal University in Shanghai. His research interests include European and Chinese foreign policies, China-EU relations, foreign policy analysis, and international trade relations. He received his PhD from the European University Institute (EUI) in Florence. Francesco Giumelli is Associate Professor in the Department of International Relations and International Organization at the University of Groningen. He was previously Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute and Fellow at the Kroc Institute of Notre Dame University. He is the author of The Success of Sanctions: Lessons Learned from the EU Experience (Routledge, 2013) and Coercing, Constraining and Signalling: Explaining UN and EU Sanctions After the Cold War (ECPR Press, 2011). He published on sanctions, private military, and security companies in the Journal of Common Market Studies, International Affairs, International Relations and International Peacekeeping. Beyond his work on sanctions, Francesco studies issues concerning the role of private actors in security and illicit trade.
Introduction, Part 1: Global multilateralism: the UN, its specialized
agencies and related regimes, 1. Cultural Heritage as the New Standard of
Civilization? Engagement with UNESCO from Rejection to Aggressive Embrace
and the Perpetuation of Empire, 2. The United States, China and the
European Union at the UN Human Rights Council: Trilateral Dynamics over
International Human Rights Norms, Institutions and Politics, 3. Pandemic
Shifts? Covid-19 and the Geopolitics of Disease, 4. The Five Permanent
Members of the UN Security Council and Multilateral Humanitarian Legal
Regimes, 5. Multilateralism in the Law of the Sea and Its Implications for
the South China Sea, Part 2: Multilateral Structures for Economic, Social
and Environmental Cooperation, 6. Apocalypse Now: The WTO Dispute
Settlement System in the Times of Trump, 7. The Multilateral Trade and
Monetary System at Peril: Can China Replace the US at the IMF?, 8.
International Labour Standards (ILS) as a Sine Qua Non of Bilateral and
Multilateral Governance of International Trade: Increasing Potential for
Conflict?, 9. A New Page for EU-China Energy Relations? The Impact of
Trump's Withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on Cooperation and Competition
in Energy Transition, Part 3: Multilateralism and Regional Security, 10.
All Dressed Up with Nowhere to Go: THe ASEAN Regional Forum, Major Power
Disinterest and the Limits of Multilateral Security Cooperation in East
Asia, 11. Sticking to the Big Brother: An Analysis of the EU's Response to
Revitalised US-NorthKorea Relations, 12. Failing Forward: US Withdrawal and
the Increasing Role of the EU and China vis-à-vis the Iran Nuclear Deal,
13. The Middle East Peace Process - Changing US Policies and EU and Chinese
Involvement Conclusion
agencies and related regimes, 1. Cultural Heritage as the New Standard of
Civilization? Engagement with UNESCO from Rejection to Aggressive Embrace
and the Perpetuation of Empire, 2. The United States, China and the
European Union at the UN Human Rights Council: Trilateral Dynamics over
International Human Rights Norms, Institutions and Politics, 3. Pandemic
Shifts? Covid-19 and the Geopolitics of Disease, 4. The Five Permanent
Members of the UN Security Council and Multilateral Humanitarian Legal
Regimes, 5. Multilateralism in the Law of the Sea and Its Implications for
the South China Sea, Part 2: Multilateral Structures for Economic, Social
and Environmental Cooperation, 6. Apocalypse Now: The WTO Dispute
Settlement System in the Times of Trump, 7. The Multilateral Trade and
Monetary System at Peril: Can China Replace the US at the IMF?, 8.
International Labour Standards (ILS) as a Sine Qua Non of Bilateral and
Multilateral Governance of International Trade: Increasing Potential for
Conflict?, 9. A New Page for EU-China Energy Relations? The Impact of
Trump's Withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on Cooperation and Competition
in Energy Transition, Part 3: Multilateralism and Regional Security, 10.
All Dressed Up with Nowhere to Go: THe ASEAN Regional Forum, Major Power
Disinterest and the Limits of Multilateral Security Cooperation in East
Asia, 11. Sticking to the Big Brother: An Analysis of the EU's Response to
Revitalised US-NorthKorea Relations, 12. Failing Forward: US Withdrawal and
the Increasing Role of the EU and China vis-à-vis the Iran Nuclear Deal,
13. The Middle East Peace Process - Changing US Policies and EU and Chinese
Involvement Conclusion
Introduction, Part 1: Global multilateralism: the UN, its specialized
agencies and related regimes, 1. Cultural Heritage as the New Standard of
Civilization? Engagement with UNESCO from Rejection to Aggressive Embrace
and the Perpetuation of Empire, 2. The United States, China and the
European Union at the UN Human Rights Council: Trilateral Dynamics over
International Human Rights Norms, Institutions and Politics, 3. Pandemic
Shifts? Covid-19 and the Geopolitics of Disease, 4. The Five Permanent
Members of the UN Security Council and Multilateral Humanitarian Legal
Regimes, 5. Multilateralism in the Law of the Sea and Its Implications for
the South China Sea, Part 2: Multilateral Structures for Economic, Social
and Environmental Cooperation, 6. Apocalypse Now: The WTO Dispute
Settlement System in the Times of Trump, 7. The Multilateral Trade and
Monetary System at Peril: Can China Replace the US at the IMF?, 8.
International Labour Standards (ILS) as a Sine Qua Non of Bilateral and
Multilateral Governance of International Trade: Increasing Potential for
Conflict?, 9. A New Page for EU-China Energy Relations? The Impact of
Trump's Withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on Cooperation and Competition
in Energy Transition, Part 3: Multilateralism and Regional Security, 10.
All Dressed Up with Nowhere to Go: THe ASEAN Regional Forum, Major Power
Disinterest and the Limits of Multilateral Security Cooperation in East
Asia, 11. Sticking to the Big Brother: An Analysis of the EU's Response to
Revitalised US-NorthKorea Relations, 12. Failing Forward: US Withdrawal and
the Increasing Role of the EU and China vis-à-vis the Iran Nuclear Deal,
13. The Middle East Peace Process - Changing US Policies and EU and Chinese
Involvement Conclusion
agencies and related regimes, 1. Cultural Heritage as the New Standard of
Civilization? Engagement with UNESCO from Rejection to Aggressive Embrace
and the Perpetuation of Empire, 2. The United States, China and the
European Union at the UN Human Rights Council: Trilateral Dynamics over
International Human Rights Norms, Institutions and Politics, 3. Pandemic
Shifts? Covid-19 and the Geopolitics of Disease, 4. The Five Permanent
Members of the UN Security Council and Multilateral Humanitarian Legal
Regimes, 5. Multilateralism in the Law of the Sea and Its Implications for
the South China Sea, Part 2: Multilateral Structures for Economic, Social
and Environmental Cooperation, 6. Apocalypse Now: The WTO Dispute
Settlement System in the Times of Trump, 7. The Multilateral Trade and
Monetary System at Peril: Can China Replace the US at the IMF?, 8.
International Labour Standards (ILS) as a Sine Qua Non of Bilateral and
Multilateral Governance of International Trade: Increasing Potential for
Conflict?, 9. A New Page for EU-China Energy Relations? The Impact of
Trump's Withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on Cooperation and Competition
in Energy Transition, Part 3: Multilateralism and Regional Security, 10.
All Dressed Up with Nowhere to Go: THe ASEAN Regional Forum, Major Power
Disinterest and the Limits of Multilateral Security Cooperation in East
Asia, 11. Sticking to the Big Brother: An Analysis of the EU's Response to
Revitalised US-NorthKorea Relations, 12. Failing Forward: US Withdrawal and
the Increasing Role of the EU and China vis-à-vis the Iran Nuclear Deal,
13. The Middle East Peace Process - Changing US Policies and EU and Chinese
Involvement Conclusion