This book examines how the US is dealing with the challenge of reconciling its global interests with regional dynamics and how it is able to produce and sustain order at the system level and within regional subsystems. The book comprises four parts, the first of which addresses global issues such as nonproliferation, trade, and freedom of the seas. US policies in these areas are carefully analyzed, considering whether and how they have been differently implemented at the regional level. The remaining parts of the book focus on the US posture toward specific regions: Europe, the Middle East,…mehr
This book examines how the US is dealing with the challenge of reconciling its global interests with regional dynamics and how it is able to produce and sustain order at the system level and within regional subsystems. The book comprises four parts, the first of which addresses global issues such as nonproliferation, trade, and freedom of the seas. US policies in these areas are carefully analyzed, considering whether and how they have been differently implemented at the regional level. The remaining parts of the book focus on the US posture toward specific regions: Europe, the Middle East, and East Asia. The policies adopted by the US to confront the most relevant challenges in each region are identified, and the ways in which policies in a specific region influence or are influenced by challenges in another region are explored. The book is a rich source of knowledge on the nature of the balance that the US has pursued between global and regional interests. It will be of much interestto scholars, to practitioners, to postgraduate/PhD students of international relations theory and American foreign policy, and to all with an interest in the ability of the US to produce international order.
Marco Clementi is an Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Pavia, Italy, where he teaches International Relations. He also teaches the subject at the University of Lugano. He received his PhD in Political Science from the University of Florence. He is the author or coauthor of books and many articles in peer-reviewed journals on international relations theory, security institutions, and the US hegemony. Matteo Dian is a Research Fellow at the School of Political Sciences of the University of Bologna. He received his PhD in political science from the Italian Institute of Human Sciences in Florence. Previously he was a Research Fellow at Ca' Foscari University in Venice. His research deals with international relations theory, US foreign policy, Japanese and Chinese foreign policy, East Asia, and regionalism. He is the author of The Evolution of the US-Japan Alliance: The Eagle and the Chrysanthemum (Elsevier, 2014) and Contested Memories in Chinese and Japanese Foreign Policies (Elsevier, 2016) and co-editor of The Chinese Challenge to the Western Order (FBK Press, 2014). Barbara Pisciotta is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the Roma Tre University, Italy, where she teaches International Relations, International Politics, and Democratization Processes. She is the author of books and many articles that focus in particular on the domestic and international sources of regime change in East and Central Europe.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I The US amidst Global Influence and Regional Dilemmas.- Part II Europe and Transatlantic Relations.- Part III The Middle East.- Part IV The Asia-Pacific.
Part I The US amidst Global Influence and Regional Dilemmas.- Part II Europe and Transatlantic Relations.- Part III The Middle East.- Part IV The Asia-Pacific.
Part I The US amidst Global Influence and Regional Dilemmas.- Part II Europe and Transatlantic Relations.- Part III The Middle East.- Part IV The Asia-Pacific.
Part I The US amidst Global Influence and Regional Dilemmas.- Part II Europe and Transatlantic Relations.- Part III The Middle East.- Part IV The Asia-Pacific.
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