Policy Space Conflicts in Global Trade Politics

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A01=Chuanjing Guan
A01=Qinyi Xu
Author_Chuanjing Guan
Author_Qinyi Xu
Category=JPS
Category=KCL
Category=KCP
China
Covid
Domestic governance
economic power rivalry
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Geopolitical rivalry
Global governance
Global hegemony
Global north
Global south
Global trade
globalisation dynamics
GVC
Institutional resilience
International order
international political economy
multilateral trade policy conflicts
Multilateralism
North South development asymmetry
Policy space
Populism
Rising powers
trade governance
Trade politics
Trade relations
Transnational capital
United States
WTO
WTO institutional analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032279329
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Policy Space Conflicts in Global Trade Politics delves into the structure, driving forces and contemporary influencing factors of trade relations dynamics, providing insights into the present and future trajectories of the global trade order.

The post-pandemic global governance challenges combined with the concurrent, if not concomitant, escalation of economic rivalries between great powers are catalysing a weakening of the liberal international order, undermining the very foundations upon which contemporary global production network is built. With the return of geopolitical tensions, the conflict over global governance versus state governance has again become the nexus where global trade politics are contested and negotiated. This book presents the Policy Space Conflict framework, an analytical framework that diverges from extant concepts of policy diffusion, power transition, socialisation and neo-liberal institutionalist models of analyses, and is instead advanced as a framework that renews the classic concept of ‘policy space’ – the space left for one to freely use preferred national policy instruments when integrated into the globalisation and institutionalisation process in the past decades. The tensions inherent in and arising from policy space can be captured in the term ‘policy space conflict’, illuminating the dynamic shifts regarding the convergence of rules under globalisation and de-convergence concerns of states. This book emphasises the underlying logic and motivating rationale that lie beneath the evolution of ‘policy space conflict’ by theoretically revisiting the concept, providing an overview of its forms in history since the Bretten Woods and transitions from market-oriented to strategy-based. This exploration is examined using case studies drawn from real-world trade politics, which encompasses discussions on the decline of multilateralism, the asymmetry in development between the Global South and Global North and China–US institutional contestation.

This book will be of interest to scholars in the fields of international relations, law, political economy, political science, economics and international trade as well as a broad range of audiences who are concerned of global trade politics in times of global uncertainty.

Qinyi Xu is Assistant Professor at the School of International Studies, Peking University (PKU). She also serves as the Researcher at the Institute of Carbon Neutrality at PKU. Her research spans global climate governance, environmental security and economics to comparative/ international political economy (trade politics and governance).

Chuanjing Guan is Associate Professor at the Department of International Political Economy, University of International Business and Economics. His research interests include international political economy, global value chains and trade politics.

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