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Japanese leaders and often the media too have substituted symbols
for strategy in dealing with Asia. This comprehensive review of
four periods over twenty years exposes the strategic gap in viewing
individually and collectively China, Taiwan, the Korean peninsula,
Russia, Central Asia, and regionalism.
The May 19-20, 2011 Asan conference provided a venue to reassess
foreign policy decision-making in China. Bringing together leading
voices in this reassessment, the meeting elicited lively exchanges
centered not on refuting rival interpretations but on jointly
exploring leads that clarify the processes of China's foreign
policy formulation that have yet to be adequately explained.
Updating the conference papers to cover the end of 2011, this book
reflects the state of analysis on the eve of the important 2012-13
transition to China's fifth-generation leaders.The Asan Institute
for Policy Studies is an independent think tank located in Seoul,
South Korea, that provides innovative policy solutions and
spearheads public discourse on many of the core issues that Korea,
East Asia, and the global community face. The goal of the institute
is not only to offer policy solutions but also to train experts in
public diplomacy and related fields in order to strengthen Korea's
capacity to better tackle some of the most pressing problems
affecting the country, the region and the world today.
The May 19-20, 2011 Asan conference provided a venue to reassess
foreign policy decision-making in China. Bringing together leading
voices in this reassessment, the meeting elicited lively exchanges
centred not on refuting rival interpretations but on jointly
exploring leads that clarify the processes of China's foreign
policy formulation that have yet to be adequately explained.
Updating the conference papers to cover the end of 2011, this book
reflects the state of analysis on the eve of the important 2012-13
transition to China's fifth-generation leaders.
This text traces the development of Chinese thinking over four
periods from the 1980s on and covers strategies toward: Russia and
Central Asia, Japan, the Korean peninsula, Southeast and South
Asia, and regionalism. It compares strategic thinking, arguing that
the level was lowest under Jiang Zemin and highest under Hu Jintao.
Often lost in the discussion about the nuclear crisis are its
regional dynamics. Since 2002, China, Japan, Russia, and South
Korea have struggled to navigate between the unsettling
belligerence of North Korea and the unilateral insistence of the
United States. This book focuses on their strategic thinking over
four stages of the crisis. Drawing on sources from each of the
countries, it examines how the four perceived their role in the
Six-Party Talks and the regional context, as they eyed each other.
The book emphasizes the significance of these talks for the
emerging security framework and great power cooperation in
Northeast Asia.
This book traces the development of Chinese thinking over four
periods from the 1980s on and covers strategies toward: Russia and
Central Asia, Japan, the Korean peninsula, Southeast and South
Asia, and regionalism. It compares strategic thinking, arguing that
the level was lowest under Jiang Zemin and highest under Hu Jintao.
While pinpointing many mistaken assumptions, it credits China with
overall successes and concludes that China stands at a crossroads.
Deng Xiaoping's legacy about patiently biding its time may be
replaced by growing assertiveness, which was difficult to suppress
earlier and now is emboldened by China's rapid rise.
This comprehensive review covers the evolution of strategic
thinking in South Korea since the 1980s in regard to China, Japan,
Russia, regionalism, and reunification. Following a consistent
framework, the book provides detailed analysis of how and why
successive presidents chose new approaches. An overview raises
broad questions about the turning points from nordpolitik to the
Sunshine Policy and finally to the Six-Party Talks leading to the
Joint Agreement.
At the crossroads of Northeast Asia, South Korea provides a
critical vantage point for viewing changes in the region. This
comprehensive review of the past quarter century covers its
strategic thinking in regard to China, Japan, Russia, regionalism,
and reunification.
Often lost in the discussion about the nuclear crisis are its
regional dynamics. From 2002 China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea
struggled to navigate between the unsettling belligerence of North
Korea and the unilateral insistence of the United States. This book
focuses on their strategic thinking over four stages of the crisis.
Drawing on sources from each of the countries, it examines how the
four perceived their role in the Six-Party Talks and the regional
context, as they eyed each other. The book emphasizes the
significance of these talks for the emerging security framework and
great power cooperation in Northeast Asia.
This study makes northeast Asia the focus of analysis on how the
nuclear crisis in 2002-2006 affected strategic thinking. While all
those in the Six-Party Talks are included, the author explores in
particular debates about the standoff in four countries on the
front lines (South Korea, China, Japan, and Russia).
Japanese leaders and often the media too have substituted symbols
for strategy in dealing with Asia. This comprehensive review of
four periods over twenty years exposes the strategic gap in viewing
individually and collectively China, Taiwan, the Korean peninsula,
Russia, Central Asia, and regionalism.
This unique book highlights the state of the art of the booming
field of atomic physics in the early 21st century. It contains the
majority of the invited papers from an ongoing series of
conferences, held every two years, devoted to forefront research
and fundamental studies in basic atomic physics, broadly defined.
This conference, held at the University of Connecticut in July
2008, is part of a series of conferences, which began in 1968 and
had its historical origins in the molecular beam conferences of the
I. I. Rabi group. It provides an archival and up-to-date summary of
current research on atoms and simple molecules as well as their
interactions with each other and with external fields, including
degenerate Bose and Fermi quantum gases and interactions involving
ultrafast lasers, strong field control of X-ray processes, and
nanoscale and mesoscopic quantum systems. The work of three recent
Nobel Laureates in atomic physics is included, beginning with a
lecture by Eric Cornell on "When Is a Quantum Gas a Quantum
Liquid?". There are also papers by Laureates Steven Chu and Roy
Glauber. The volume also contains the IUPAP Young Scientist Prize
lecture by Cheng Chin on "Exploring Universality of Few-Body
Physics Based on Ultracold Atoms Near Feshbach Resonances".
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