This thought-provoking study questions the prevailing narrative on US-China relations, of inevitable conflict between the two giants. It offers a fresh perspective, suggesting that the institutionalised competition, guided by strategic foresight and restraint, may actually foster stability and peace during the international order transition.
This thought-provoking study questions the prevailing narrative on US-China relations, of inevitable conflict between the two giants. It offers a fresh perspective, suggesting that the institutionalised competition, guided by strategic foresight and restraint, may actually foster stability and peace during the international order transition.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Kai He is Professor of International Relations at Griffith University, Australia. He served as a non-resident Senior Scholar at the United States Institute of Peace (2022-2023), an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellow (2017-2020), and a postdoctoral fellow in the Princeton-Harvard China and the World Program (2009-2010).
Inhaltsangabe
1. International Order Transition and US-China Competition: Beyond the Thucydides Trap; 2. Institutional Peace Theory: Institutionalizing US-China Competition; 3. Institutional Balancing in the Security Sub-order: Building a New Co-existent Security Architecture; 4. Institutional Balancing in the Economic Sub-order: Beyond the Spaghetti Bowl Effect; 5. Institutional Balancing in the Political Sub-order: Keeping the Political Diversity for Peace; 6. Building Institutional Peace in the Asia Pacific in the 21st Century.
1. International Order Transition and US-China Competition: Beyond the Thucydides Trap; 2. Institutional Peace Theory: Institutionalizing US-China Competition; 3. Institutional Balancing in the Security Sub-order: Building a New Co-existent Security Architecture; 4. Institutional Balancing in the Economic Sub-order: Beyond the Spaghetti Bowl Effect; 5. Institutional Balancing in the Political Sub-order: Keeping the Political Diversity for Peace; 6. Building Institutional Peace in the Asia Pacific in the 21st Century.
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