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4-Volume Set China’s International Relations in Asia Routledge Major Works Routledge December 2009 234x156: 1,625pp Set Hb: 978-0-415-47691-1 CRITICAL ISSUES IN MODERN POLITICS Edited and with a new introduction by Li Mingjiang, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore The startling growth of China’s economic and military power, as well as its cultural influence, is having a huge impact on the rest of the world. The key region to observe this impact is, of course, Asia and the past decade has witnessed significant and multi-faceted changes in China’s policy toward its Asian neighbours and in the relations between them. The strategic dimension of China’s approaches to Asian international relations is increasingly a focal point in the scholarly community and policy-making circles. However, views on the strategic impact of China’s rise on Asia’s political and security future are polarized, with some believing that China’s regional policy is an intentional attempt to challenge the US supremacy in Asia, or who are simply suspicious of China’s long-term regional ambitions. Volume I of this new Routledge Major Work collection examines China’s long-term strategy in Asia, and Volume II looks at China and non-traditional security in Asia. Volume III focuses on China and Asian regionalism, while Volume IV assembles the best scholarship on the response of Asian states to the rise of China and how China’s rise and its increasing influence in the region have changed the foreign and security policy of those regional states and their domestic political economies. China’s International Relations in Asia is fully indexed and includes a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context.

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4-Volume Set

China’s International Relations in Asia

Routledge Major Works

RoutledgeDecember 2009234x156: 1,625ppSet Hb: 978-0-415-47691-1

CRITICAL ISSUES IN MODERN POLITICS

Edited and with a new introduction by Li Mingjiang, S. RajaratnamSchool of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University,Singapore

The startling growth of China’s economic and military power, as well as its culturalinfluence, is having a huge impact on the rest of the world. The key region to observethis impact is, of course, Asia and the past decade has witnessed significant and multi-faceted changes in China’s policy toward its Asian neighbours andin the relations between them. The strategic dimension of China’sapproaches to Asian international relations is increasingly afocal point in the scholarly community and policy-makingcircles. However, views on the strategic impact of China’srise on Asia’s political and security future are polarized,with some believing that China’s regional policy is anintentional attempt to challenge the US supremacy inAsia, or who are simply suspicious of China’s long-termregional ambitions.

Volume I of this new Routledge Major Work collectionexamines China’s long-term strategy in Asia, and VolumeII looks at China and non-traditional security in Asia.Volume III focuses on China and Asian regionalism, whileVolume IV assembles the best scholarship on the response ofAsian states to the rise of China and how China’s rise andits increasing influence in the region have changed theforeign and security policy of those regional states andtheir domestic political economies.

China’s International Relations in Asia is fully indexedand includes a comprehensive introduction, newlywritten by the editor, which places the collectedmaterial in its historical and intellectual context.

Part 1: China’s Regional Strategic Environment

1. Daniel Twining, ‘America’s Grand Design in Asia’, The WashingtonQuarterly, 2007, 30, 3, 79–94.

2. Robert S. Ross, ‘Balance of Power Politics and the Rise of China:Accommodation and Balancing in East Asia’, Security Studies, 2006, 15,3, 355–95.

3. Evan S. Medeiros, ‘Strategic Hedging and the Future of Asia-PacificStability’, The Washington Quarterly, 2005–6, 29, 1, 145–67.

4. Purnendra Jain and John Bruni, ‘Japan, Australia, and the UnitedStates: Little NATO or Shadow Alliance?’, International Relations of theAsia-Pacific, 2004, 4, 265–85.

Part 2: China and Strategic Interactions in Northeast Asia

5. Christopher Twomey, ‘Explaining Chinese Foreign Policy towardNorth Korea: Navigating Between the Scylla and Charybdis ofProliferation and Instability’, Journal of Contemporary China, 2008, 17,56, 401–23.

6. Peter Hays Gries, ‘China’s “New Thinking” on Japan’, The ChinaQuarterly, 2005, 184, 831–50.

7. Liselotte Odgaard, ‘Chinese Northeast Asia Policies and the Tragedy ofNortheast Asia’s Security Architecture’, Global Change, Peace & Security,2008, 20, 2, 185–99.

Part 3: China’s Strategic Role in Southeast Asia

8. C. P. Chung, ‘Southeast Asia–China Relations: Dialectics of “Hedging”and “Counter-Hedging”’, Southeast Asian Affairs, 2004, 35–53.

9. Elizabeth Economy, ‘China’s Rise in Southeast Asia: Implications forthe United States’, Journal of Contemporary China, 2005, 14, 44,409–25.

10. Lawrence E. Grinter, ‘China, the United States, and MainlandSoutheast Asia: Opportunism and the Limits of Power’, ContemporarySoutheast Asia, 2006, 28, 3, 447–65.

11. Evelyn Goh, ‘Great Powers and Hierarchical Order in Southeast Asia’,International Security, 2007–8, 32, 3, 113–57.

Part 4: China’s Strategic Involvement in South Asia

12. James R. Holmes and Toshi Yoshihara, ‘China’s Naval Ambitions inthe Indian Ocean’, The Journal of Strategic Studies, 2008, 31, 3, 367–94.

13. Shaun Randol, ‘How to Approach the Elephant: Chinese Perceptionsof India in the Twenty-first Century’, Asian Affairs, 2008, 211–26.

14. Thierry Mathou, ‘Tibet and its Neighbors: Moving toward a NewChinese Strategy in the Himalayan Region’, Asian Survey, 2005, 45, 4,503–21.

15. Sadaf Farooq, ‘Sino-American Relations in the Post-Cold War Era:Implications for South Asia’, China: An International Journal, 2007, 5,1, 78–94.

Part 5: China and the Strategic Game in Central Asia

16. Kevin Sheives, ‘China Turns West: Beijing’s Contemporary StrategyTowards Central Asia’, Pacific Affairs, 2006, 79, 2, 205–24.

17. Russell Ong, ‘China’s Security Interests in Central Asia’, Central AsianSurvey, 2005, 24, 4, 425–39.

18. Richard Weitz, ‘Averting a New Great Game in Central Asia’, TheWashington Quarterly, 2006, 29, 3, 155–67.

Conclusion

19. Renato Cruz De Castro, ‘Exploring the Prospect of China’s PeacefulEmergence in East Asia’, Asian Affairs, 2006, 33, 2, 85–102.

Part 6: Non-Traditional Security: the Contemporary Context

20. Joseph Y. S. Cheng, ‘Broadening the Concept of Security in East andSoutheast Asia: The Impact of the Asian Financial Crisis and theSeptember 11 Incident’, Journal of Contemporary China, 2006, 15, 46,89–111.

Part 7: China’s Energy Security

21. Charles E. Ziegler, ‘The Energy Factor in China’s Foreign Policy’,Journal of Chinese Political Science, 2006, 11, 1, 1–23.

22. Joseph Y. S. Cheng, ‘A Chinese View of China’s Energy Security’,Journal of Contemporary China, 2008, 17, 55, 297–317.

23. Zhang Xuegang, ‘Southeast Asia and Energy: Gateway to Stability’,China Security, 2007, 3, 2, 18–35.

24. Leszek Buszynski and Iskandar Sazlan, ‘Maritime Claims and EnergyCooperation in the South China Sea’, Contemporary Southeast Asia,2007, 29, 1, 143–71.

25. Suisheng Zhao, ‘China’s Global Search for Energy Security:Cooperation and Competition in Asia-Pacific’, Journal of ContemporaryChina, 2008, 17, 55, 207–27.

26. Janet Xuanli Liao, ‘Sino-Japanese Energy Security and RegionalStability: The Case of the East China Sea Gas Exploration’, East Asia,2008, 25, 57–78.

27. Timo Menniken, ‘China’s Performance in International ResourcePolitics: Lessons from the Mekong’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, 2007,29, 1, 97–120.

Part 8: China’s Economic Security

28. Wang Zhile, ‘Foreign Acquisition in China: Threat or Security?’, ChinaSecurity, 2007, 3, 2, 86–98.

29. Ye Fujing, ‘Financial Opening and Financial Security’, Chinese Journalof International Politics, 2007, 1, 559–87.

Part 9: China and Environmental Issues

30. Alex Liebman, ‘Trickle-down Hegemony? China’s “Peaceful Rise” andDam Building on the Mekong’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, 2005, 27,2, 281–304.

31. Ka Zeng and Josh Eastin, ‘International Economic Integration andEnvironmental Protection: The Case of China’, International StudiesQuarterly, 2007, 51, 971–95.

32. Joanna I. Lewis, ‘China’s Strategic Priorities in International ClimateChange Negotiations’, The Washington Quarterly, 2007–8, 31, 1,155–74.

33. Hongyuan Yu, ‘Knowledge and Climate Change Policy Coordinationin China’, East Asia, 2004, 21, 3, 58–77.

34. Ryokichi Hirono, ‘Japan’s Environmental Cooperation with ChinaDuring the Last Two Decades’, Asia-Pacific Review, 2007, 14, 2, 1–16.

Part 10: Social Dimensions of China’s Non-Traditional Security

35. Nicholas Thomas, ‘The Regionalization of Avian Influenza in EastAsia: Responding to the Next Pandemic (?)’, Asian Survey, 2006, XLVI,6, 917–36.

36. Andrew Thompson, ‘International Security Challenges Posed byHIV/AIDS: Implications for China’, China: An International Journal,2004, 2, 2, 287–307.

37. David Kerr and Laura C. Swinton, ‘China, Xinjiang, and theTransnational Security of Central Asia’, Critical Asian Studies, 2008, 40,1, 113–42.

VOLUME IChina and the Changing StrategicDynamics in Asia

VOLUME IIChina and Non-Traditional Security in Asia

China’s International Relations in Asia CRITIC

Routledge Major Works

Part 11: Historical and Contemporary Contexts

38. Takeshi Hamashita, ‘Changing Regions and China: HistoricalPerspectives’, China Report, 2001, 37, 3, 333–51.

39. Matsuo Watanabe, ‘Issues in Regional Integration of East Asia:Conflicting Priorities and Perceptions’, Asia-Pacific Review, 2004, 11, 2,1–17.

40. Julie Gilson, ‘Strategic Regionalism in East Asia’, Review of InternationalStudies, 2007, 33, 145–63.

Part 12: Continuity and Changes in Chinese Approach

41. Christopher R. Hughes, ‘Nationalism and Multilateralism in ChineseForeign Policy: Implications for Southeast Asia’, The Pacific Review,2005, 18, 1, 119–35.

42. Kuik Cheng-Chwee, ‘Multilateralism in China’s ASEAN Policy: ItsEvolution, Characteristics, and Aspiration’, Contemporary Southeast Asia,2005, 27, 1, 102–22.

43. Takeshi Yuzawa, ‘The Evolution of Preventive Diplomacy in theASEAN Regional Forum: Problems and Prospects’, Asian Survey, 2006,46, 5, 785–804.

44. Allen Carlson, ‘Helping to Keep the Peace (Albeit Reluctantly): China’sRecent Stance on Sovereignty and Multilateral Intervention’, PacificAffairs, 2004, 77, 1, 9–27.

45. Flemming Splidsboel Hansen, ‘The Shanghai Co-operationOrganization’, Asian Affairs, 2008, XXXIX, II, 217–32.

Part 13: China’s Regional Economic Multilateralism

46. Kevin G. Cai, ‘The ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement and East AsianRegional Grouping’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, 2003, 25, 3,387–404.

47. Donghyun Park, ‘The Prospects of the ASEAN–China Free Trade Area(ACFTA): A Qualitative Overview’, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy,2007, 12, 4, 485–503.

48. Stephen Hoadley and Jian Yang, ‘China’s Cross-Regional FTAInitiatives: Towards Comprehensive National Power’, Pacific Affairs,2007, 80, 2, 327–48.

49. John W. Garver, ‘Development of China’s Overland TransportationLinks with Central, South-west and South Asia’, The China Quarterly,2006, 1–22.

Part 14: Greater China and East Asian Regionalism

50. David Kerr, ‘Greater China and East Asian Integration: Regionalismand Rivalry’, East Asia, 2004, 21, 1, 75–92.

51. Marion Chyun-Yang Wang, ‘Greater China: Powerhouse of East AsianRegional Cooperation’, East Asia, 2004, 21, 4, 38–63.

52. Dajin Peng, ‘Ethnic Chinese Business Networks and the Asia-PacificEconomic Integration’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 2000, 35,229–50.

Part 15: China and the Prospect of East Asian Integration

53. Byung-Joon Ahn, ‘The Rise of China and the Future of East AsianIntegration’, Asia-Pacific Review, 2004, 11, 2, 18–35.

54. T. J. Pempel, ‘Northeast Asian Economic Integration: A Region in Flux’,Asia-Pacific Review, 2007, 14, 2, 45–61.

55. Sarah Chan and Chun-Chien Kuo, ‘Trilateral Trade Relations amongChina, Japan and South Korea: Challenges and Prospects of RegionalEconomic Integration’, East Asia, 2005, 22, 1, 33–50.

56. Nick Bisley, ‘East Asia’s Changing Regional Architecture: Towards anEast Asian Economic Community?’, Pacific Affairs, 2007–8, 80, 4,603–25.

Part 16: Contentions over Historical Memory and Identity

57. Shogo Suzuki, ‘The Importance of “Othering” in China’s NationalIdentity: Sino-Japanese Relations as a Stage of Identity Conflicts’, ThePacific Review, 2007, 20, 1, 23–47.

58. Peter Hays Gries, ‘The Koguryo Controversy, National Identity, andSino-Korean Relations Today’, East Asia, 2005, 22, 4, 3–17.

59. J. J. Suh, ‘War-like History or Diplomatic History? Contentions Overthe Past and Regional Orders in Northeast Asia’, Australian Journal ofInternational Affairs, 2007, 61, 3, 382–402.

60. Martin Stuart-Fox, ‘Southeast Asia and China: The Role of History andCulture in Shaping Future Relations’, Contemporary Southeast Asia,2004, 26, 1, 116–39.

Part 17: Big Powers, Small Powers, Variegated Responses to China

61. Ralpha A. Cossa, ‘US Security Strategy in Asia and the Prospects for anAsian Regional Security Regime’, Asia-Pacific Review, 2005, 12, 1,64–86.

62. Tok Sow Keat, ‘Neither Friends Nor Foes: China’s Dilemmas inManaging its Japan Policy’, China: An International Journal, 2005, 3, 2,292–300.

63. Jing-dong Yuan, ‘The Dragon and the Elephant: Chinese–IndianRelations in the 21st Century’, The Washington Quarterly, 2007, 30, 3,131–44.

64. Nayan Chanda, ‘China and Cambodia: In the Mirror of History’, Asia-Pacific Review, 2002, 9, 2, 1–11.

65. Busakorn Chantasasawat, ‘Burgeoning Sino-Thai Relations:Heightening Cooperation, Sustaining Economic Security’, China: AnInternational Journal, 2006, 4, 1, 86–112.

66. Alexander L. Vuving, ‘Strategy and Evolution of Vietnam’s ChinaPolicy: A Changing Mixture of Pathways’, Asian Survey, 2006, 46, 6,805–24.

67. Kuik Cheng-Chwee, ‘The Essence of Hedging: Malaysia andSingapore’s Response to a Rising China’, Contemporary Southeast Asia,2008, 30, 2, 159–85.

68. Alice D. Ba, ‘Who’s Socializing Whom? Complex Engagement in Sino-ASEAN Relations’, The Pacific Review, 2006, 19, 2, 157–79.

Part 18: The Economic Impact of China’s Rise

69. Rajah Rasiah, ‘The Competitive Impact of China on Southeast Asia’sLabour Markets’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 2005, 35, 4, 447–70.

70. Stephen Frost, ‘Chinese Outward Direct Investment in Southeast Asia:How Big are the Flows and What Does it Mean for the Region?’, ThePacific Review, 2004, 17, 3, 323–40.

71. John Ravenhill, ‘Is China an Economic Threat to Southeast Asia?’,Asian Survey, 2006, 46, 5, 653–74.

72. Vivienne Wee and Chan Yuk Wah, ‘Ethnicity and Capital: ChangingRelations Between China and Southeast Asia’, Journal of ContemporaryAsia, 2006, 36, 3, 328–49.

Part 19: China and Asia’s Emerging New Order

73. David C. Kang, ‘Getting Asia Wrong: The Need for New AnalyticalFrameworks’, International Security, 2003, 27, 4, 57–85.

74. Denny Roy, ‘Southeast Asia and China: Balancing or Bandwagoning?’,Contemporary Southeast Asia, 2005, 27, 2, 305–22.

75. David Camroux, ‘Asia … Whose Asia? A ’Return to the Future’ of aSino-Indic Asian Community’, The Pacific Review, 2007, 20, 4, 551–75.

VOLUME IIIChina and Asian RegionalMultilateralism

VOLUME IVEast Asia Responds to a Rising China

CAL ISSUES IN MODERN POLITICS

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