China Among Unequals: Asymmetric Foreign Relationships in AsiaWorld Scientific, 2010 - 552 trang Pt. I. Asymmetric international relationships. ch. 1. Recognition, deference, and respect : generalizing the lessons of an asymmetric Asian order. ch. 2. The United States, human rights, and moral autonomy in the post-Cold War world. ch. 3. Dissecting soft power : attention, attraction, persuasion. ch. 4. The dilemma of regional powers. ch. 5. Democratic defeatism : reconsidering the logic of asymmetric wars -- pt. II. Underpinnings of China's foreign policy. ch. 6. China between region and world. ch. 7. Traditional China and the globalization of international relations thinking. ch. 8. Sustainable international leadership : lessons from the Sino-Vietnamese relationship, 968-1885. ch. 9. China as a normative foreign policy actor. ch. 10. Asymmetry theory and China's concept of multipolarity -- pt. III. China and the United States. ch. 11. The brightest house : civilization and asymmetry. ch. 12. The reality and limits of American power. ch. 13. How size matters : the United States, China, and asymmetry. ch. 14. United States and China's rise : parity and the accommodation of civilizations -- pt. IV. China and Asia. ch. 15. Asymmetric triangles and the Washington-Beijing-Taipei relationship. ch. 16. The United States and Sino-Vietnamese relations. ch. 17. Asymmetry and systemic misperception : China, Vietnam, and Cambodia during the 1970s. ch. 18. China and Southeast Asia : asymmetry, leadership, and normalcy. ch. 19. Vietnam and China in an era of economic uncertainty. ch. 20. Korea and Vietnam : similarities and differences in their relationships to China |
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China Among Unequals: Asymmetric Foreign Relationships in Asia Brantly Womack Xem trước bị giới hạn - 2010 |
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action American appear ASEAN Asian asymmetric asymmetric relationships attention autonomy become behavior bilateral Cambodia capacities central challenge Chapter China Chinese common concerns considered continued cooperation countries course creates crisis deference disparity domestic domination economic effect empire equal especially example existing expected external fact force foreign policy global greater hostility human important increasing individual influence interaction interests involved issues Korea larger lead leadership less limited major means military misperception Moreover multilateral multipolarity mutual negotiation neighbors normal normative parties pattern peaceful percent perspective political position possible present problem question regional power relations relationship relative remain requires respect rest risk role side simply situation smaller soft South South Korea Southeast Asia Soviet stability stronger structure success sustainable theory threat tion trade triangle United Vietnam Vietnamese vulnerability weaker