The US, China, and Japan form a ‚troubled triangle, ‚ with each country negotiating its foreign policy toward the other two in response to economic and security pressures that operate as an interrelated duality. Written by international relations experts, this book examines how the three countries respond to this set of pressures and to each other.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Introductory; Takashi Inoguchi and G. John Ikenberry 2. East Asia and Liberal International Order: Hegemony, Balance, and Consent in the Shaping of East Asian Regional Order; G. John Ikenberry 3. Japan’s Foreign Policy Line after the Cold War; Takashi Inoguchi 4. Peaceful Rise, Multipolarity and China’s Foreign Policy Line; Zhongqi Pan and Zhimin Chen 5. Japan’s U.S. Policy under DPJ and Its Domestic Background: Still Recovering from the Unarticulated ‚Changes‘; Yoichiro Sato 6. China‘ United States policy and its domestic backgrounds; Jia Qingguo 7. Sibling Rivalry? Domestic Politics and the US-Japan Alliance; David Leheny 8. China’s Japan Policy and its Domestic Background; Liu Jiangyong 9. Japan, China and the American ‚Pivot‘: A Triangular Analysis; Lowell Dittmer 10. Japanese policy toward China; Emi Mifune
Über den Autor
Chongqi Pan, Fudan University, China. Yoichiro Sato, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, Japan Qingguo Jia, Peking University, China. David Leheny, Princeton University, USA. Jiangyung Liu, Tsinghua University, China. Lowell Dittmer, The University Of California, USA. Emi Mifune, Komazawa University, Japan.