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- 1From:AEI Paper & StudiesAMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE Executive Summary Offshore balancing is a grand strategy based on the premise that the interests of maritime powers, such as the United States, are best served by avoiding long-term...
- 2From:AEI Paper & StudiesExecutive Summary The United States may be preparing for the wrong kind of war with China. Much of America's planning for a potential war with China appears to hinge on an assumption that the war would be short and...
- 3From:East Asia: An International Quarterly (Vol. 39, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedChina's vigorous involvement in the Pacific Island countries (PICs) is often surmised by scholars of international relations (Wesley-Smith 1 (See CR1); Pryke 2 (See CR2)) to be primarily motivated by geopolitical...
- 4From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 6170)It is usually clear when a war breaks out. Even if there is no formal declaration, the work of invasion or destruction begins. The outbreak of war can be given a date, even a time. This is not true of a cold war. We now...
- 5From:American DiplomacyTitle: Multilateralism and the Superpower Author:Jeremy Greenstock Text: Editor's note: The author served as UK Ambassador to the UN 1998-2003. The UN with its network of institutions and agencies is the only...
- 6From:Journal of East Asian Studies (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThese books are about power transitions in the Western experience, and collectively they represent a good cross-section of the best mainstream scholarship about power transitions. However, when Japan, China, or...
- 7From:Journal of East Asian Studies (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe rise of China and its rapid emergence as a US peer competitor in the East Asian maritime balance has generated a wide-ranging debate in the United States over Chinese intentions and over US policy relating to a...
- 8From:Journal of East Asian Studies (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIssues surrounding "power transitions"--the relationship between a rising state and a declining great power (often the hegemon)--are an important topic for both international relations theory and contemporary policy....
- 9From:Journal of East Asian Studies (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedOpportunities for dialogue between scholars who perceive of themselves as "international relations theorists" and those with area expertise are rare (in part, because those of us who lack regional expertise fear the...
- 10From:Foreign Policy Analysis (Vol. 16, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedStates often play multiple roles on the world stage, which need not fit together coherently. Moreover, foreign policy roles may be dissonant with one another: auxiliary roles may detract from the state's master role or...
- 11From:Insight Turkey (Vol. 21, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedInternational security theories generally identify economic power as the key determinant of military power, and thereby of security but there is usually not much explanation about the determinants of economic power. In...
- 12From:Insight Turkey (Vol. 21, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe present paper looks into the current policies of Russia in the Balkans. It argues that after a short period of withdrawal from the region, Moscow is currently making efforts to regain its position and, in some...
- 13From:Foreign Policy Analysis (Vol. 15, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhat drives Russia's Baltic policy? To answer this question, I develop a neoclassical realist framework that explains how local great powers act toward neighboring small states. In brief, the framework argues that local...
- 14From:Strategic Studies Quarterly (Vol. 12, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedUS national security strategy has increasingly come to focus on potential threats from Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea, all states with whom fighting even purely conventional wars can be expected to be...
- 15From:Strategic Studies Quarterly (Vol. 12, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe return of great power competition as described in the 2018 National Defense Strategy suggests the need to reconsider the theories and strategies of Cold War conventional deterrence in a world of near-peer...
- 16From:Journal of Politics in Latin America (Vol. 10, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedScholars often assume that as a global superpower, the United States has had great influence and impact on political regime developments in the world. This article critically examines these claims, focusing on Latin...
- 17From:Independent Review (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedOn October 24, 2017, at the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) Nineteenth Party Congress, President Xi Jinping was elected to a second five-year term, the Central Committee was packed with his supporters, and the party's...
- 18From:Perceptions (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe EU is a distinct actor in global politics. Researchers have developed different concepts to explain its sui generis nature. All approaches, however, converge in the sense that the EU has acted as an important...
- 19From:Perceptions (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Middle East region has always remained the centre of attraction for major powers due to its geostrategic importance and huge energy resources. The Middle East, due to hosting many ethnic and religious nationalities,...
- 20From:Global Governance (Vol. 24, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines the possible links between regional governance and global governance from a regional perspective. It presents and develops a typology of linkages that include: (1) irrelevance; (2) conflict; (3)...