This book explores the decoupling process between the US and China from a number of perspectives. The rise of China, a country that is very different from the dominating West headed by the USA, in terms of both political systems and civilizational traditions, is profoundly unsettling for the latter. Talk of decoupling the West from China has been going on for some years now and some actions have already taken place in this direction, though attempts, such as the replacement terminology of De-risking, are being made on both sides to talk down the possibility. What is the current state of affairs? What is the likely prospect? This project sets out to explore these questions. This is one of the first attempts at dealing with the issue as comprehensively as possible in that it is not only cross- and inter-disciplinary but also in that scholars from both the global South and North and both the East and West are participants, and will interest scholars of Chinese politics and international political relations.
1. What is Decoupling and Where Is Our World Headed?.-
2. Chip
Wars and Cold Wars: Decoupling and De-Risking as Aspects of a New
Conjuncture.-3. Decoupling and Elimination of Risks: The Rivalry between
Powers and the Implications for Latin America.-
4. Beyond the Hegemonic Trap:
Chinese World Order and its Epistemological Foundation.- 5. Dedollarisation
and Rise of the RMB: A Bid for Hegemony in Reshaping the Global Economic
Order?.- 6. Can the “Backyard“ Decouple? Mining, Agribusiness and
Telecommunications in Argentina and Brazil.-
7. The Expansion of the BRICS
and the Future of the World Order.-
8. The Environmental Consequences of
Decoupling.-
9. On Contemporary Chinese Ideologies.-
10. Americas Unfinished
China Business: Preliminary Reflections on Liberalism, Spiritual Warfare
and Taiwan.
Mobo Gao, Professor of Chinese Studies at Adelaide University, has extensive experience at various universities in China, UK, US and Australia. He is known as a prolific author with several books and numerous articles and book chapters and for his insight into Chinese politics, Chinese language, culture and society, as well as Chinese migration to Australia and the mass media.
Justin OConnor is Professor of Cultural Economy at Adelaide University and a Visiting Professor at the School of Cultural Management, Shanghai Jiaotong University. Between 2012-18, he was a member of the UNESCO Expert Facility. He recently co-authored Red Creative: Culture and Modernity in China (Intellect), and Culture is Not an Industry (Manchester University Press).
Baohui Xie, a Scholarly Teaching Fellow at Adelaide University, has extensive experience in global finance. His diverse research interests encompass Chinese politics, economics, media, religion, and language. Dr Xie is also an advanced-level interpreter accredited in China and a NAATI-certified translator for English and Chinese in both directions.
Jack Butcher, a PhD Candidate and Adjunct Lecturer at Adelaide University, researches the security of East Asia and the Asia/Indo-Pacific. Jack recently published in the Australian Journal of International Affairs, the Lowy Interpreter, and co-edited Different Histories, Shared Futures: Dialogues on Australia-China (Palgrave Macmillan).