1st Edition

China’s Rise and Regional Integration in East Asia Hegemony or community?

Edited By Yong Wook Lee, Key-young Son Copyright 2014
198 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

198 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

198 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

With featuring far-reaching diversities and disparities among the regional states in their political, economic and social systems and cultural and religious orientations, East Asia is a microcosm of international society at large. Nevertheless, there are unique dynamics unfolding in East Asia at the turn of the twenty-first century, namely the rise of China as a contender for regional and global... Read more

1. Introduction, Key-young Son and Yong Wook Lee  Part I: Hegemony 2. U.S.-China Relations and a New Dual Leadership Structure in the Asia-Pacific, Quansheng Zhao 3. The United States, East Asia, and Chinese "Triumphalism", Yinhong Shi 4. A Reason for Concern but Not Alarm: A Chinese Perspective on China’s Military Rise, Qingguo Jia 5. The Emergence of the G2 Era and Faltering South Korea-China Relations, Jung-Nam Lee  Part II: Community 6. Transnational Identity and Order in Northeast Asia, Gilbert Rozman 7. Commercial Space Versus Security Space: The Complex Institutions of Northeast Asia, T.J. Pempel 8. China’s Relations with Its Neighboring Countries: Historical Patterns and the Formation of a Regional Community, Xiaoming Zhang 9. Synthesis and Reformulation of Foreign Policy Change: Japan and East Asian Financial Regionalism, Yong Wook Lee

Biography

Yong Wook Lee is Associate Professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Korea University, Korea.

Key-young Son is HK Research Professor in the Asiatic Research Institute at Korea University, Korea.

"Because their analytical perspective is rooted more in the long term view of East Asian integration, it is not difficult to apply their principles and assertions to the somewhat altered circumstances that are in place today and those that will be in place in the near-term future. The chapters are appropriate for specialists, graduate students and, in some cases, advanced undergraduates."
Kristin Mulready-Stone, Kansas State University, East Asia Integration Studies