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China's Arctic Ambitions and What They Mean for Canada is an
in-depth studies of China's increasing interest in the Arctic. It
offers a holistic approach to understanding Chinese motivations and
the potential impacts of greater Chinese presence in the
circumpolar region, exploring resource development, shipping,
scientific research, governance, and security.Drawing on extensive
research in Chinese government documentation, business and media
reports, and current academic literature, this timely volume
eschews the traditional assumption that Chinese actions are unified
and monolithic in their approach to Arctic affairs. Instead, it
offers a careful analysis of the different, and often competing,
interests and priorities of Chinese government and industry.
Analyzing Chinese interests and activities from a Canadian
perspective, the book provides an unparalleled point of reference
to discuss the implications for the Canadian and broader
circumpolar North.
Sino-Japanese relations have been repeatedly strained by the
territorial dispute over a group of small islands, known as the
Senkaku islands in Japan and the Diaoyu islands in China. The rich
fishing grounds, key shipping lanes, and perhaps especially,
potentially rich oil deposits around the islands exacerbate this
dispute in a confluence of resource pressures, growing nationalism,
and rising military spending in the region. Bridging Troubled
Waters reminds us that the tensions over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands
are only a part of a long history of both conflict and cooperation
in maritime relations between Japan and China. James Manicom
examines the cooperative history between China and Japan at sea and
explains the conditions under which two rivals can manage disputes
over issues such as territory, often correlated with war. China and
Japan appear incapable of putting history behind them, are poised
on the brink of a strategic rivalry, and seem at risk of falling
into an unintentional war over disputed maritime claims. Bridging
Troubled Waters challenges this view by offering a case-by-case
analysis of how China and Japan have managed maritime tensions
since the dispute erupted in 1970. The author advances an approach
that offers a trade-off between the most important stakes in the
disputed maritime area with a view to establishing a stable
maritime order in the East China Sea. The book will be of interest
to policymakers, academics, and regional specialists in Asia,
security studies, and international conflict and cooperation.
Sino-Japanese relations have been repeatedly strained by the
territorial dispute over a group of small islands, known as the
Senkaku islands in Japan and the Diaoyu islands in China. The rich
fishing grounds, key shipping lanes, and perhaps especially,
potentially rich oil deposits around the islands exacerbate this
dispute in a confluence of resource pressures, growing nationalism,
and rising military spending in the region. Bridging Troubled
Waters reminds us that the tensions over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands
are only a part of a long history of both conflict and cooperation
in maritime relations between Japan and China. James Manicom
examines the cooperative history between China and Japan at sea and
explains the conditions under which two rivals can manage disputes
over issues such as territory, often correlated with war. China and
Japan appear incapable of putting history behind them, are poised
on the brink of a strategic rivalry, and seem at risk of falling
into an unintentional war over disputed maritime claims. Bridging
Troubled Waters challenges this view by offering a case-by-case
analysis of how China and Japan have managed maritime tensions
since the dispute erupted in 1970. The author advances an approach
that offers a trade-off between the most important stakes in the
disputed maritime area with a view to establishing a stable
maritime order in the East China Sea. The book will be of interest
to policymakers, academics, and regional specialists in Asia,
security studies, and international conflict and cooperation.
Since the end of the Cold War, the new Chinese leadership
generation has had to promulgate new guiding principles for
handling global diplomacy which acknowledges China's new position.
Given the dramatic changes in the international system and its
domestic economic success for the growing "China's rise" idea on
the global stage, China in the 21st century faces a mixture of old
and new challenges, including terrorism, hegemonism, and
authoritarianism. While Deng Xiaooping combined Taoism, an ancient
Chinese philosophy, into "Taoist diplomacy" in response to the
hostile international position after the Tiananmen Incident,
China's foreign policy keeps changing, and the multidimensional
diplomacy adopted by China can be seen as a consistent theme in
Chinese foreign policy in the 21st century. Multidimensional
Diplomacy of Contemporary China attempts to examine the origins,
guiding principles and sequential outcomes of China's
multidimensional diplomacy in the 21st century, working under the
flag of "peaceful development," "harmonious international order,"
and "global responsibility." The contributions are grouped into
three sections. The first discusses the theoretical foundations of
multidimensional diplomacy. The second section turns the analytical
focus to China's immediate neighbors in East Asia, and at last the
book will go beyond the immediate neighborhood of China to the
global community. These essays explore China's dealings with the
countries of Africa, the Gulf, and the South Pacific and provide
other in-depth analyses on China's foreign policy towards Pakistan,
Russia, and Japan. This book seeks to significantly shape the
knowledge and thinking about China's global interactions in the
21st century.
China's Arctic Ambitions and What They Mean for Canada is an
in-depth studies of China's increasing interest in the Arctic. It
offers a holistic approach to understanding Chinese motivations and
the potential impacts of greater Chinese presence in the
circumpolar region, exploring resource development, shipping,
scientific research, governance, and security. Drawing on extensive
research in Chinese government documentation, business and media
reports, and current academic literature, this timely volume
eschews the traditional assumption that Chinese actions are unified
and monolithic in their approach to Arctic affairs. Instead, it
offers a careful analysis of the different, and often competing,
interests and priorities of Chinese government and industry.
Analyzing Chinese interests and activities from a Canadian
perspective, the book provides an unparalleled point of reference
to discuss the implications for the Canadian and broader
circumpolar North.
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