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El. knyga: Transatlantic Community and China in the Age of Disruption: Partners, Competitors, Rivals

Edited by (Johns Hopkins University, USA), Edited by (Johns Hopkins University, China)
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"This volume analyzes what China's rise means for the transatlantic community in a new age of disruption-an age marked by great power rivalry, technological upheavals, and the diffusion of power. The book explores how today's conditions-including heightened Western concerns about Chinese influence operations, Chinese efforts to manipulate critical economic interconnections and dependencies, rapid technological advances, the Russia-China entente, and growing linkages between North Atlantic and Indo-Pacific security-have forced Western actors to adopt a more differentiated approach. In this great power competition, they must decide how and where to work with China as an important partner; how to address China's competitive challenges; and how to address China's efforts to forge a set of norms and institutions to challenge the open, rules-based international system. The book will be of key interest to students and scholars of Transatlantic Relations, International Relations, Global Governance, European Politics, Asian Security, US and EU Foreign Policy, and Sino-Western relations. It will also be of interest to think-tank researchers and policy practitioners"--

This volume analyzes what China’s rise means for the transatlantic community in a new age of disruption—an age marked by great power rivalry, technological upheavals, and the diffusion of power.



This volume analyzes what China’s rise means for the transatlantic community in a new age of disruption—an age marked by great power rivalry, technological upheavals, and the diffusion of power.

The book explores how today’s conditions—including heightened Western concerns about Chinese influence operations, Chinese efforts to manipulate critical economic interconnections and dependencies, rapid technological advances, the Russia–China entente, and growing linkages between North Atlantic and Indo-Pacif ic security—have forced Western actors to adopt a more differentiated approach. In this great power competition, they must decide how and where to work with China as an important partner, how to address China’s competitive challenges, and how to address China’s efforts to forge a set of norms and institutions to challenge the open, rules-based international system.

The book will be of key interest to students and scholars of Transatlantic Relations, International Relations, Global Governance, European Politics, Asian Security, US and EU Foreign Policy, and Sino-Western relations. It will also be of interest to think-tank researchers and policy practitioners.

Introduction Part 1: The Return of Great Power Rivalry in an Age of
Disruption
1. Crossing the River by Feeling the Stones: The United States,
Europe, and China in an Age of Rivalry and Disruption
2. Challenging China:
The United States and the Dilemmas of Western Leadership
3. The View from
China: Perspectives on the West in the Xi Jinping Era
4. Partners,
Competitors, Rivals: Europe between America and China Part 2: Dilemmas of
Security and Order
5. NATO and China
6. The Russia-China Entente:
Implications for the Transatlantic Community
7. Governance and Norms in a New
World Order: The Contest for Global Leadership Part 3: Economic Power, the
Climate Challenge, and the Search for Meaningful Cooperation
8. The Dollar,
the Euro and the RMB: Power Relations in Monetary Affairs
9. The Geoeconomics
of the US and China: From Co-Dependence to Increasing Bifurcation
10. China
as Partner?: Tackling Climate and Energy Challenges
Daniel S. Hamilton is Senior nonresident Fellow at the Brookings Institution and Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Institute of Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, DC, USA.

Joe Renouard is Senior Lecturer and Resident Professor at the Hopkins-Nanjing Center of Johns Hopkins University SAIS in Nanjing, China.