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After Engagement

Dilemmas in U.S.-China Security Relations
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From cooperation to a new cold war: is this the future for today's two great powers?. U.S. policy toward China is at an inflection point. For more than a generation, since the 1970s, a near-consensus view in the United States supported engagement with China, with the aim of integrating China into the U.S.-led international order. By the latter part of the 2010s, that consensus had collapsed as a much more powerful and increasingly assertive China was seen as a strategic rival to theUnited States. How the two countries tackle issues affecting the most important bilateral relationship in the world will significantly shape overall international relations for years to come.In this timely book, leading scholars of U.S.-China relations and China's foreign policy address recent changes in American assessments of China's capabilities and intentions and consider potential risks to international security, the significance of a shifting international distribution of power, problems of misperception, and the risk of conflicts. China's military modernization, its advancing technology, and its Belt and Road Initiative, as well as regional concerns, such as the South China Sea disputes, relations with Japan, and tensions on the Korean Peninsula, receive special focus.
Jacques deLisle is the Stephen A. Cozen Professor of Law, professor of political science, and director of the Center for the Study of Contemporary China at the University of Pennsylvania, and director of the Asia Program at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, Philadelphia. Avery Goldstein is the David M. Knott Professor of Global Politics and International Relations, inaugural director of the Center for the Study of Contemporary China, and associate director of the Christopher H. Browne Center for International Politics at the University of Pennsylvania.
Acknowledgments 1. Rivalry and Security in a New Era for US-China Relations 2. Assessing the Dangers of Conflict: The Sources and Consequences of Deepening US-China Competition 3. China's Contribution to the US-China Security Dilemma 4. An Ideological Contest in US-China Relations? Assessing China's Defense of Autocracy 5. Stormy Seas: The South China Sea in US-China Relations 6. Japan and US-China Strategic Competition: In from the Beginning 7. No Space to Hedge: US-China Competition and Its Impact on Korea 8. The Taiwan Issue in US-China Relations: Sliding into a Security Dilemma? 9. US-China Relations and Chinese Military Modernization 10. Globalized Innovation and Great Power Competition: The US-China Tech Clash 11. China's Belt and Road Initiative Contributors Index
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