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For many years, political leaders and analysts have debated the
impacts of China's rise on the stability of the existing
international system. International observers have also debated
whether China would be a status quo power or a revisionist power,
and whether China would observe the rules and regulations of
international institutions and regimes. China Joins Global
Governance: Cooperation and Contentions, edited by Mingjiang Li,
provides an insightful contribution to our understanding of these
issues through a specific angle: China's role in global governance.
The contributors to this volume address such questions as, how has
China dealt with major global institutions and regimes? How has
China helped address various global challenges? How is China's rise
changing the international approach to global governance? The
contributors cover a broad range of issues, including China's
vision and strategy in global multilateralism, China's role in
global economic/financial/trade governance, China's policy towards
the global environment and international development, and China's
approaches to various global security issues such as nuclear
disarmament and nonproliferation. China Joins Global Governance is
an essential text in understanding the future trajectory of China's
international policy.
For many years, political leaders and analysts have debated the
impacts of China's rise on the stability of the existing
international system. International observers have also debated
whether China would be a status quo power or a revisionist power,
and whether China would observe the rules and regulations of
international institutions and regimes. China Joins Global
Governance: Cooperation and Contentions, edited by Mingjiang Li,
provides an insightful contribution to our understanding of these
issues through a specific angle: China's role in global governance.
The contributors to this volume address such questions as, how has
China dealt with major global institutions and regimes? How has
China helped address various global challenges? How is China's rise
changing the international approach to global governance? The
contributors cover a broad range of issues, including China's
vision and strategy in global multilateralism, China's role in
global economic/financial/trade governance, China's policy towards
the global environment and international development, and China's
approaches to various global security issues such as nuclear
disarmament and nonproliferation. China Joins Global Governance is
an essential text in understanding the future trajectory of China's
international policy.
Can China and the United States bridge their political differences?
Are those differences as large as conventional wisdom suggests?
Thirty years after formal U.S.-Chinese diplomatic relations were
established, A Bridge Too Far? addresses these essential questions
by bridging the academic divide separating scholars who study these
countries from Chinese and Western political science perspectives.
Rather than bringing together China specialists exclusively, then,
this book allows a broad range of scholars using Western analytical
tools to examine Chinese politics and political theory in relation
to the United States. It also allows Chinese scholars to examine
specific policy areas related to countries and thereby confirm or
contest the broader analysis offered by their outsider
counterparts. Some of the contributors are Chinese specialists, a
number having played key roles as advisors to the central
government, others students of American politics, and stilll others
political economists or political theorists who are not involved
directly in area studies. Finally, some are academically trained
but work in China in the area of environmental regulation or are
legal advisors for state-owned businesses. In all, the contributors
bring extensive experience with China, and all see commonalities
beneath the obvious and deep differences between the two nations.
Emerging from an ongoing face-to-face dialog, the book unites this
unusual group to uncover genuine areas of overlap between the
politics of the two nations without diminishing the very real
distance separating them. The essays included discuss topics such
as China's democratic prospects and the rise of local village
elections, the role of interest groups, Chinese political and legal
reforms and developments regarding intellectual property rights and
environmental regulation, Western and Chinese political philosophy,
and Sino-American foreign policy interactions.
Token forces - tiny national troop contributions in much larger
coalitions - have become ubiquitous in UN peacekeeping. This
Element examines how and why this contribution type has become the
most common form of participation in UN peace operations despite
its limited relevance for missions' operational success. It
conceptualizes token forces as a path-dependent unintended
consequence of the norm of multilateralism in international uses of
military force. The norm extends states' participation options by
giving coalition builders an incentive to accept token forces;
UN-specific types of token forces emerged as states learned about
this option and secretariat officials adapted to state demand for
it. The Element documents the growing incidence of token forces in
UN peacekeeping, identifies the factors disposing states to
contribute token forces, and discusses how UN officials channel
token participation. The Element contributes to the literatures on
UN peacekeeping, military coalitions, and the impacts of norms in
international organizations.
This book intends to make sense of how Chinese leaders perceive
China's rise in the world through the eyes of China's international
relations (IR) scholars. Drawing on a unique, four-year opinion
survey of these scholars at the annual conference of the Chinese
Community of Political Science and International Studies (CCPSIS)
in Beijing from 2014-2017, the authors examine Chinese IR scholars'
perceptions of and views on key issues related to China's power,
its relationship with the United States and other major countries,
and China's position in the international system and track their
changes over time. Furthermore, the authors complement the surveys
with a textual analysis of the academic publications in China's top
five IR journals. By comparing and contrasting the opinion surveys
and textual analyses, this book sheds new light on how Chinese IR
scholars view the world as well as how they might influence China's
foreign policy.
Based on the field investigation and the summary of the published
research results of the April 20, 2013, Lushan, Sichuan, China,
MS7.0 earthquake, having occurred along the same fault zone which
accommodated the May 12, 2008, Wenchuan MS8.0 earthquake, this
Brief tries to describe and discuss the special earthquake
phenomenology associated with both the local geology and the
changing society. Since the occurrence of this earthquake, there
have been the scientific debates on (1) the seismo-tectonics of
this earthquake which has no primary seismic fault discovered on
the surface of the ground; (2) the relation between this earthquake
and the Wenchuan earthquake (i.e., whether it can be considered as
one of the aftershocks); and (3) how well have been accomplished in
the reduction of earthquake disasters, 5 years after the Wenchuan
earthquake. This Brief also tries to introduce the studies and
practice of Chinese seismological agencies for the reduction of
earthquake disasters. Due to language and cultural barriers, such
an introduction makes sense not only for English readers but also
for Chinese readers. For example, people (abroad) are always asking
why there are so many Chinese seismologists working on earthquake
prediction. In fact the Chinese wording 'earthquake prediction' has
a much wider coverage than that in English. And actually the
Chinese approach to (time-dependent) seismic hazard has no
systematic difference from outside world in its methodology.
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