The United States, China, and the Competition for Control

This book considers whether the United States and the People’s Republic of China have irreconcilable visions of world order.

The United States, China, and the Competition for Control evaluates the twin claims that China seeks to dismantle the post–World War II international order and that the United States seeks to defend it. It defines the post–war order and examines how the United States and China have behaved within and in relation to it since 1945. An analysis of the two states’ rhetoric and policy reveals that their preferences for international order are not as divergent as today’s conventional wisdom suggests. The book therefore concludes that U.S. policies that treat China as a threat to international order are misplaced and offers policy recommendations for how the United States can both preserve the post–war order and protect its vital national interests.

The book will be of interest to foreign policy practitioners, commentators, and analysts as well as students and scholars of security studies, international relations, and geopolitics.

1145532205
The United States, China, and the Competition for Control

This book considers whether the United States and the People’s Republic of China have irreconcilable visions of world order.

The United States, China, and the Competition for Control evaluates the twin claims that China seeks to dismantle the post–World War II international order and that the United States seeks to defend it. It defines the post–war order and examines how the United States and China have behaved within and in relation to it since 1945. An analysis of the two states’ rhetoric and policy reveals that their preferences for international order are not as divergent as today’s conventional wisdom suggests. The book therefore concludes that U.S. policies that treat China as a threat to international order are misplaced and offers policy recommendations for how the United States can both preserve the post–war order and protect its vital national interests.

The book will be of interest to foreign policy practitioners, commentators, and analysts as well as students and scholars of security studies, international relations, and geopolitics.

49.99 In Stock
The United States, China, and the Competition for Control

The United States, China, and the Competition for Control

by Melanie W. Sisson
The United States, China, and the Competition for Control

The United States, China, and the Competition for Control

by Melanie W. Sisson

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Overview

This book considers whether the United States and the People’s Republic of China have irreconcilable visions of world order.

The United States, China, and the Competition for Control evaluates the twin claims that China seeks to dismantle the post–World War II international order and that the United States seeks to defend it. It defines the post–war order and examines how the United States and China have behaved within and in relation to it since 1945. An analysis of the two states’ rhetoric and policy reveals that their preferences for international order are not as divergent as today’s conventional wisdom suggests. The book therefore concludes that U.S. policies that treat China as a threat to international order are misplaced and offers policy recommendations for how the United States can both preserve the post–war order and protect its vital national interests.

The book will be of interest to foreign policy practitioners, commentators, and analysts as well as students and scholars of security studies, international relations, and geopolitics.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040149126
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 11/22/2024
Series: Routledge Studies in US Foreign Policy
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 156
File size: 651 KB

About the Author

Melanie W. Sisson is a fellow in the Foreign Policy program’s Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology at the Brookings Institution, USA. She researches the use of the armed forces in international politics, U.S. national security strategy, and defense applications of emerging technologies. Sisson earned a doctorate in political science from the University of Colorado at Boulder and a master’s from the Columbia University School of International Affairs. She is co-editor of Military Coercion and US Foreign Policy: The Use of Force Short of War (Routledge, 2020).

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Order 3. The United States 4. China 5. The Competition for Control

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