[Notice] New Book: China’s Rise and Regional Integration in East Asia: Hegemony? or Community?
2014.03.06 2842
New Book: China’s Rise and Regional Integration in East Asia: Hegemony? or Community? (New York: Routledge, 2014)
Routledge, one of the world’s leading academic publishers, issued a new book, China’s Rise and Regional Integration in East Asia: Hegemony? or Community?, compiling a set of papers submitted to the East Asian Community Forum, organized annually by the Asiatic Research Institute, Korea University. The volume was co-edited by Yong Wook Lee, associate professor at the Department of Political Science and International Relations, Korea University, and Key-young Son, Humanities Korea (HK) professor at the Asiatic Research Institute. The book’s contributors from South Korea, the United States and China analyze hegemony and community as the two outstanding features of East Asia’s regional order in transformation.
Publication Information:
Routledge Series: Politics in Asia
Hardcover: 198 pages
Publisher: Routledge (March 14, 2014)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0415735130
ISBN-13: 978-0415735131
Contents
Figures and Tables
Foreword
Contributors
CHAPTER ONE
Introduction
Key-young Son and Yong Wook Lee, Korea University
PART I. HEGEMONY
CHAPTER TWO
U.S.-China Relations and a New Dual Leadership Structure in the Asia-Pacific
Quansheng Zhao, American University
CHAPTER THREE
The United States, East Asia, and Chinese “Triumphalism”
Yinhong Shi, Renmin University
CHAPTER FOUR
A Reason for Concern but Not Alarm: A Chinese Perspective on China’s Military Rise
Qingguo Jia, Peking University
CHAPTER FIVE
The Emergence of the G2 Era and Faltering South Korea-China Relations
Jung-Nam Lee, Korea University
PART II. COMMUNITY
CHAPTER SIX
Transnational Identity and Order in Northeast Asia
Gilbert Rozman, Princeton University
CHAPTER SEVEN
Commercial Space Versus Security Space: The Complex Institutions of Northeast Asia
T.J. Pempel, University of California, Berkeley
CHAPTER EIGHT
China’s Relations with Its Neighboring Countries: Historical Patterns and the Formation of a Regional Community
Xiaoming Zhang, Peking University
CHAPTER NINE
Synthesis and Reformulation of Foreign Policy Change: Japan and East Asian Financial Regionalism
Yong Wook Lee, Korea University