Geopolitics of Red Oil

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A01=Andrew Stephen Campion
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Author_Andrew Stephen Campion
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Category=NHTB
CFIUS Review
China Discourse
China Threat Discourse
China's Military Spending
Chinese Communist Party
Chinese Government
CNOOC
CNOOC Unocal case study
CNOOC's Bid
CNOOC’s Bid
CT
CT Perception
discursive security studies
energy geopolitics
Energy Policy
Energy Resources
Energy Sources
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ESD
Fu Manchu
international relations theory
IR Approach
National Security Strategy
OPEC Embargo
PLA Modernization
Poststructural Discourse Analysis
Red Menace
Sino American Relations
United States Navy
US foreign policy analysis
Western perceptions of China energy security
Western vulnerability
Yellow Peril

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138351516
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Energy security has emerged as one of the most important contemporary geopolitical issues. Access to reliable, cheap energy has become essential to the functioning of modern economies but the uneven distribution of energy supplies has led to perceptions of significant Western vulnerability. At the same time, many in the West have become wary of China’s re-emergence as a major power in global politics, with its impact on Western foreign policies and potential threat to Western energy security.

This book offers fresh insights into the rise of China as a global superpower and the ways in which its rise is perceived to threaten Western energy security, engaging specifically with how the idea of the China threat has emerged in popular discourse. The author questions how recent US foreign policy has sought to position China as an antagonist to Western energy interests and explores how this image has become the dominant understanding of China by the West. Rather than treating these issues as given, which orthodox approaches tend to do, this book analyses the discursive relationship between US identity, foreign policy and energy security, which leads to a more nuanced and critical understanding of perceptions of China’s potential threat to Western energy security.

Filling an important gap in the emerging corpus of research on energy security, this book will be particularly valuable to students and scholars of Politics, International Relations and Chinese Studies.

Andrew Stephen Campion is the Head of Research at the Atlantic Council, UK. His work focusses on the construction of security threats with an emphasis on energy and China.

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