Lexington Books
Pages: 224
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-4319-3 • Hardback • April 2010 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-0-7391-4321-6 • eBook • April 2010 • $121.50 • (£94.00)
Peter Kien-hong Yu is professor at Swinburne University of Technology (Australia, Sarawak Campus). Emily W. Chow is an assistant professor at the Graduate School of International Affairs, Ming Chuan University (Taiwan, R.O.C.). Shawn S. F. KAO, is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Tung-hai University (Taiwan, R.O.C.).
Chapter 1 Ch. 1 International Governance and Globalization
Chapter 2 Ch. 2 Norms, Power, the Power of Norms, & Community: Essentials of International Governance
Chapter 3 Ch. 3 Does Beijing Understand International Regimes?
Chapter 4 Ch. 4 Beijing's Hegemony under International Relations and International Regimes and postscript on the World Health Organization
Chapter 5 Ch. 5 Adaptation and Strategic Calculation: China's Participation in International Regimes and Institutions
Chapter 6 Ch. 6 The PRC's Governance Diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific Region
Chapter 7 Ch. 7 Governing the Taiwan Strait in a Globalizing World: Using Military Adversary Regime and Non-military Adversary Regimes as a Tool
Chapter 8 Ch. 8 Globalization, East Asia, and the Future of Global Politics
Chapter 9 Ch. 9 Universality Claims and "Failures" Across Cultures: Liberalism vs. Asian Values
The editors of this book have undertaken a Herculean but very important task: to show that international governance will be the dominant school of thought among international relations scholars in the future. This book is well organized and the contributors make a persuasive case, beginning rightly, this writer believes, with examining China's views (the nation that is most critical to global trends) on the subject.
— John F. Copper, Rhodes College
This book is well-written and well-organized and will appeal to students, scholars and practitioners. It is a clear, balanced, and timely volume that will be considered a 'must read' by anyone with an interest in Chinese politics and global politics. A solid work.
— Dennis V. Hickey, Missouri State University