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Worldviews of Aspiring Powers
Domestic Foreign Policy Debates in China, India, Iran, Japan and Russia
Edited by Henry R. Nau and Deepa Ollapally
256 pages
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11 figures and 11 tables
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235x156mm
978-0-19-993749-3
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Paperback
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18 October 2012
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- Edited by two top international relations scholars
- Provides groundbreaking comparative study of foreign policy in several rising nations
Worldviews of Aspiring Powers provides a serious study of the domestic foreign policy debates in five world powers who have gained more influence as the US's has waned: China, Japan, India, Russia and Iran. Featuring a leading regional scholar for each essay, each essay identifies the most important domestic schools of thought—nationalists, realists, globalists, idealists/exceptionalists—and connects them to the historical and institutional sources that fuel each nation's foreign policy experience. While scholars have applied this approach to US foreign policy, this book is the first to track the competing schools of foreign
policy thought within five of the world's most important rising powers. Concise and systematic, Worldviews of Aspiring Powers will serve as both an essential resource for foreign policy scholars trying to understand international power transitions and as a text for courses that focus on the same.Readership: Students and scholars of: international relations, international studies, foreign policy, contemporary politics. Also suited for area studies in: East Asian studies, South Asian Studies, Eastern European studies, and Near Eastern/Middle Eastern studies.
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Edited by Henry R. Nau, Professor of Political Science, George Washington University, and Deepa Ollapally, Associate Director, Sigur Center for Asian Studies, George Washington University Henry Nau is Professor of Political Science, George Washington University, and author of The Myth of America's Decline (Oxford UP). Deepa Ollapally is Associate Director of the Sigur Center for Asian Studies, George Washington University, and author of The Politics of Extremism in South Asia (Cambridge UP) Contributors: Farideh Farhi Andrew Kutchins Saideh
Lotfian Narushige Michishita Nikola Mirilovic Henry R. Nau Deepa Ollapally Rajesh Rajapopalan Richard J. Samuels David Shambaugh Ren Xiao Igor Zevelev
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1. Introduction: Domestic Voices of Aspiring Powers
Henry R. Nau
2. China: The Conflicted Rising Power
David Shambaugh and Ren Xiao
3. India: Foreign Policy Perspectives of an Ambiguous Power
Deepa Ollapally and Rajesh Rajapopalan
4. Iran's Post-Revolution Foreign Policy Puzzle
Farideh Farhi and Saideh Lotfian
5. Hugging and Hedging: Japanese Grand Strategy in the 21st Century
Narushige Michishita and Richard J. Samuels
6. Russia's Contested National Identity and Foreign Policy
Andrew Kutchins and Igor Zevelev
7. Conclusion: Realists, Nationalists and Globalists and the Nature of Contemporary Rising Powers
Deepa Ollapally and Nikola Mirilovic
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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