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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Li Xing , Professor Timothy M. ShawPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Weight: 0.460kg ISBN: 9781472428363ISBN 10: 1472428366 Pages: 246 Publication Date: 29 September 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsContents: Introduction: understanding the hegemony and the dialectics of the emerging world order, Li Xing; Theorizing the rise of the Second World and the changing international system, Steen Fryba Christensen and Raul Bernal-Meza; Constructing and conceptualizing 'interdependent hegemony' in an era of the rise of the BRICS and beyond, Li Xing and Oscar Garcia Agustin; BRICS and bilaterals: synergies and contestations, Renu Modi; From boulders to ashlars - BRICS of a new world order: hierarchies of power and degrees of freedom in the emerging world system of the twenty-first century, Leonid L. Fituni; G20 and C2: Sino-US relations as an institutional cooperation game?, Lin Hongyu and Li Xing; China in Africa: cool cash or a new world order?, Soren Villadsen; A 'new silk road' between China and the Arab world: a problem for the US or the EU?, Wolfgang Zank; 'Chineseness' as socialization: China and the ASEAN in East Asian regionalism, Zhang Jiuan and Li Xing; Conclusion: the BRICS and beyond: new global order, reorder and/or disorder? Insights from 'global governance', Timothy M. Shaw; Index.Reviews'We are living in a period of displacement of meridians. Is it a power shift or a paradigm shift? Li Xing maps four crises of the international system, functionality, scope, legitimacy and authority, and in so doing raises a central question about the turn of interests for China and the other BRIC countries: will the future be characterized by systematic conflicts between traditional powers (particularly, the American polarity) and the emerging powers (BRICs)? This book proposes a series of highly interesting reflections on this essential topic in order to understand the challenges of the contemporary world.'Giuseppe Cocco, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil'In this important and pathbreaking book, editor/author Li Xing and his co-authors expertly examine how the rise of China could transform the U.S.-dominated international order. Xing's noteworthy conclusion is that China and other emerging nations cannot hope to establish an alternative independent hegemony by effectively replacing the United States as the world's preeminent power. Since China and the U.S. are, in fact, intertwined in a constant process of shaping and reshaping the global order , Xing argues it is in their mutual interest to deal with their relations strategically and constructively, as their bilateral relations can be best adjusted and balanced under multilateral organizations, such as the G20, under which a new type of cooperative partnership between them can be developed . Coming from a distinguished scholar of international relations theory, who possesses a deep understanding of China's rise and national aspirations, this conclusion goes far to discredit the misguided popular view that China and the U.S. are inevitably destined to go to war in a future battle for global domination.'Donald Gross, Centre for Strategic and International Studies, USA 'We are living in a period of displacement of meridians. Is it a power shift or a paradigm shift? Li Xing maps four crises of the international system, functionality, scope, legitimacy and authority, and in so doing raises a central question about the turn of interests for China and the other BRIC countries: will the future be characterized by systematic conflicts between traditional powers (particularly, the American polarity) and the emerging powers (BRICs)? This book proposes a series of highly interesting reflections on this essential topic in order to understand the challenges of the contemporary world.' Giuseppe Cocco, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 'In this important and pathbreaking book, editor/author Li Xing and his co-authors expertly examine how the rise of China could transform the U.S.-dominated international order. Xing's noteworthy conclusion is that China and other emerging nations cannot hope to establish an alternative independent hegemony by effectively replacing the United States as the world's preeminent power. Since China and the U.S. are, in fact, intertwined in a constant process of shaping and reshaping the global order , Xing argues it is in their mutual interest to deal with their relations strategically and constructively, as their bilateral relations can be best adjusted and balanced under multilateral organizations, such as the G20, under which a new type of cooperative partnership between them can be developed . Coming from a distinguished scholar of international relations theory, who possesses a deep understanding of China's rise and national aspirations, this conclusion goes far to discredit the misguided popular view that China and the U.S. are inevitably destined to go to war in a future battle for global domination.' Donald Gross, Centre for Strategic and International Studies, USA Author InformationLi Xing is Director, Research Center on Development and International Relations, Department of Culture and Global Studies, Aalborg University, Denmark. 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