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Rising power, limited influence : the politics of Chinese investments in Europe and the Liberal International Order / Indrajit Roy, Jappe Eckhardt, Dimitrios Stroikos, Simona Davidescu.

Contributor(s): Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press, 2023Description: pages cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780192887115
Online resources: Summary: "China's resurgence has spawned anxieties about an impending revision of the Liberal International Order. How do Chinese investments in Europe enable it to shape world order? Drawing on case studies from across Europe, the contributors to this volume investigate the ways in which China translates its growing resources into effective influence, with varying degrees of success. They find that influence is most effectively achieved by harnessing the agency of states and societies in Europe towards China's preferences. Fragmented and messy rather than unified and coherent, these preferences comprise an amalgam of domestic, regional and international considerations rather than aimed at revising world order. Neverthless, as the contributors to this volume demonstrate, the interaction of European agency and Chinese preferences could have a variety of unintended consequences that range from straining the Liberal International Order to strengthening it. Against narratives that foreground inevitable conflict or assured cooperation, the volume innovates a dynamic framework to understand the granular ways in which states and societies in Europe interact with state and society in China to (re-)shape the Liberal International Order"-- Provided by publisher.
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"China's resurgence has spawned anxieties about an impending revision of the Liberal International Order. How do Chinese investments in Europe enable it to shape world order? Drawing on case studies from across Europe, the contributors to this volume investigate the ways in which China translates its growing resources into effective influence, with varying degrees of success. They find that influence is most effectively achieved by harnessing the agency of states and societies in Europe towards China's preferences. Fragmented and messy rather than unified and coherent, these preferences comprise an amalgam of domestic, regional and international considerations rather than aimed at revising world order. Neverthless, as the contributors to this volume demonstrate, the interaction of European agency and Chinese preferences could have a variety of unintended consequences that range from straining the Liberal International Order to strengthening it. Against narratives that foreground inevitable conflict or assured cooperation, the volume innovates a dynamic framework to understand the granular ways in which states and societies in Europe interact with state and society in China to (re-)shape the Liberal International Order"-- Provided by publisher.