Power, Perception and Foreign Policymaking

Regular price €51.99
A01=Scott Brown
arms embargo debate
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
Author_Scott Brown
Category=JPS
Category=JW
China's OBOR
China's Rise
chinas
China’s OBOR
China’s Rise
decision-making processes
eq_bestseller
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EU China Relation
EU Gdp
EU Response
EU's Ability
EU's Interpretation
EU's Policy Discourse
EU’s Ability
EU’s Interpretation
EU’s Policy Discourse
foreign policy analysis
Foreign Policy Subsystems
Human Rights Violator
IMF Assistance
Impending Power Transition
international relations theory
interpretations
normative
Normative Threat
OBOR Initiative
OBOR Project
Opportunity Interpretation
PLA Navy
Political Opportunity Interpretation
Power Transition Logic
qualitative policy research
rise
Scott A. W. Brown
SCS Dispute
Supranational Subsystem
threat
Threat Interpretations
Transatlantic Debate
transatlantic relations
Western responses to China's global influence

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032096087
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book examines the changing dynamics of power in the international arena since the end of the Cold War. Brown engages in analysis of how the United States and the European Union have responded to the so-called rise of China through an examination of how policymakers’ perceptions of China have changed over time and influenced their policy choices. This study undertakes rigorous analysis of how these perceptions have evolved between 1989 and 20092016, offering a comparative perspective on the similarities and differences between the policy discourse and behaviour within these two Western powers.

Brown argues that ‘China’s rise’ is a contested notion, with varied perceptions of how the implications of China’s ascendancy have shaped policy preferences in ways that are inconsistent with concerns over the threat of an impending power-transition. Combining concepts and methods derived from IR and FPA, the book examines the linkages between great power politics and policymakers’ competing interpretations of key international actors, and their influence upon foreign policies. The main objective of the study is to illuminate the different ways in which the US and the EU have responded to the rise of China through a close analysis of their decision-making processes and outcomes across a series of key encounters and events, including the transatlantic debate over the EU’s proposal to lift its China arms embargo (2003-2005).

Undertaking qualitative analysis of the development of American and European policymakers’ perceptions of China, this book will be of interest to graduates and scholars of post-Cold War international politics, Foreign Policy Analysis, policymaking, US-China relations and EU-China relations.

Scott A.W. Brown is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Georgia Institute of Technology, USA.